Department of Public Health and Policy, Whelan Building, University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 3GB, England.
School of Public Health, Imperial College London, London, England.
Bull World Health Organ. 2017 Dec 1;95(12):821-830G. doi: 10.2471/BLT.16.189795. Epub 2017 Oct 19.
To systematically review published studies of interventions to reduce people's intake of dietary trans-fatty acids (TFAs).
We searched online databases (CINAHL, the CRD Wider Public Health database, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, Ovid®, MEDLINE®, Science Citation Index and Scopus) for studies evaluating TFA interventions between 1986 and 2017. Absolute decrease in TFA consumption (g/day) was the main outcome measure. We excluded studies reporting only on the TFA content in food products without a link to intake. We included trials, observational studies, meta-analyses and modelling studies. We conducted a narrative synthesis to interpret the data, grouping studies on a continuum ranging from interventions targeting individuals to population-wide, structural changes.
After screening 1084 candidate papers, we included 23 papers: 12 empirical and 11 modelling studies. Multiple interventions in Denmark achieved a reduction in TFA consumption from 4.5 g/day in 1976 to 1.5 g/day in 1995 and then virtual elimination after legislation banning TFAs in manufactured food in 2004. Elsewhere, regulations mandating reformulation of food reduced TFA content by about 2.4 g/day. Worksite interventions achieved reductions averaging 1.2 g/day. Food labelling and individual dietary counselling both showed reductions of around 0.8 g/day.
Multicomponent interventions including legislation to eliminate TFAs from food products were the most effective strategy. Reformulation of food products and other multicomponent interventions also achieved useful reductions in TFA intake. By contrast, interventions targeted at individuals consistently achieved smaller reductions. Future prevention strategies should consider this effectiveness hierarchy to achieve the largest reductions in TFA consumption.
系统综述已发表的关于减少人群饮食反式脂肪(TFA)摄入量的干预措施的研究。
我们检索了在线数据库(CINAHL、CRD 更广泛的公共卫生数据库、Cochrane 系统评价数据库、Ovid、MEDLINE、科学引文索引和 Scopus),以评估 1986 年至 2017 年间 TFA 干预措施的研究。主要结局指标为 TFA 摄入量的绝对减少量(g/天)。我们排除了仅报告食品中 TFA 含量而与摄入量无关的研究。我们纳入了试验、观察性研究、荟萃分析和建模研究。我们对数据进行了叙述性综合解释,将研究分为从针对个体的干预到面向人群的、结构性变化的连续体。
在筛选了 1084 篇候选论文后,我们纳入了 23 篇论文:12 篇实证研究和 11 篇建模研究。丹麦的多项干预措施使 TFA 摄入量从 1976 年的 4.5g/天减少到 1995 年的 1.5g/天,然后在 2004 年禁止在加工食品中使用 TFA 的法规生效后几乎完全消除。在其他地方,要求食品配方改革的法规使 TFA 含量减少了约 2.4g/天。工作场所干预措施使 TFA 摄入量平均减少 1.2g/天。食品标签和个体饮食咨询都显示减少了约 0.8g/天。
包括从食品产品中消除 TFA 的立法在内的多组分干预措施是最有效的策略。食品产品的配方改革和其他多组分干预措施也实现了 TFA 摄入量的有用减少。相比之下,针对个体的干预措施始终只实现了较小的减少。未来的预防策略应考虑这一有效性层次结构,以实现 TFA 消费的最大减少。