Charles Perkins Centre, University of Sydney, Australia2Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Sydney, Australia.
JAMA Intern Med. 2016 Dec 1;176(12):1769-1777. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2016.6721.
Food industry sponsorship of nutrition research may bias research reports, systematic reviews, and dietary guidelines.
To determine whether food industry sponsorship is associated with effect sizes, statistical significance of results, and conclusions of nutrition studies with findings that are favorable to the sponsor and, secondarily, to determine whether nutrition studies differ in their methodological quality depending on whether they are industry sponsored.
OVID MEDLINE, PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus from inception until October 2015; the reference lists of included reports.
Reports that evaluated primary research studies or reviews and that quantitatively compared food industry-sponsored studies with those that had no or other sources of sponsorship.
Two reviewers independently extracted data from each report and rated its quality using the ratings of the Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine, ranging from a highest quality rating of 1 to a lowest of 5.
Results (statistical significance and effect size) favorable to the sponsor and conclusions favorable to the sponsor. If data were appropriate for meta-analysis, we used an inverse variance DerSimonian-Laird random-effects model.
Of 775 reports reviewed, 12, with quality ratings ranging from 1 to 4, met the inclusion criteria. Two reports, with data that could not be combined, assessed the association of food industry sponsorship and the statistical significance of research results; neither found an association. One report examined effect sizes and found that studies sponsored by the food industry reported significantly smaller harmful effects for the association of soft drink consumption with energy intake and body weight than those not sponsored by the food industry. Eight reports, including 340 studies, assessed the association of industry sponsorship with authors' conclusions. Although industry-sponsored studies were more likely to have favorable conclusions than non-industry-sponsored studies, the difference was not significant (risk ratio, 1.31 [95% CI, 0.99-1.72]). Five reports assessed methodological quality; none found an association with industry sponsorship.
Although industry-sponsored studies were more likely to have conclusions favorable to industry than non-industry-sponsored studies, the difference was not significant. There was also insufficient evidence to assess the quantitative effect of industry sponsorship on the results and quality of nutrition research. These findings suggest but do not establish that industry sponsorship of nutrition studies is associated with conclusions that favor the sponsors, and further investigation of differences in study results and quality is needed.
食品行业对营养研究的赞助可能会使研究报告、系统评价和饮食指南产生偏差。
确定食品行业的赞助是否与具有有利于赞助商的研究结果的营养研究的效果大小、结果的统计显著性以及结论有关,其次,确定根据是否有行业赞助,营养研究在方法质量上是否存在差异。
从 OVID MEDLINE、PubMed、Web of Science 和 Scopus 开始,直到 2015 年 10 月;包含报告的参考文献列表。
评估原始研究或综述,并定量比较食品行业赞助的研究与没有赞助或其他赞助来源的研究的报告。
两名审查员分别从每份报告中提取数据,并使用牛津循证医学中心的评级对其质量进行评级,范围从最高质量评级 1 到最低评级 5。
有利于赞助商的研究结果(统计显著性和效果大小)和有利于赞助商的结论。如果数据适合进行荟萃分析,我们使用逆方差德西蒙尼-莱尔德随机效应模型。
在审查的 775 份报告中,有 12 份报告具有 1 至 4 的质量评分,符合纳入标准。其中两份报告评估了食品行业赞助与研究结果统计显著性之间的关联,但都没有发现关联。一份报告研究了效果大小,发现软饮料消费与能量摄入和体重之间的关联的研究,由食品行业赞助的报告显示出的有害影响明显小于没有食品行业赞助的报告。八份报告(包括 340 项研究)评估了行业赞助与作者结论之间的关联。尽管行业赞助的研究更有可能得出有利于行业的结论,但差异并不显著(风险比,1.31[95%CI,0.99-1.72])。五份报告评估了方法质量;均未发现与行业赞助有关。
尽管行业赞助的研究更有可能得出有利于行业的结论,但差异并不显著。也没有足够的证据来评估行业赞助对营养研究结果和质量的定量影响。这些发现表明,但并不能确定食品行业对营养研究的赞助与有利于赞助商的结论有关,需要进一步调查研究结果和质量的差异。