Crockett Rachel A, King Sarah E, Marteau Theresa M, Prevost A T, Bignardi Giacomo, Roberts Nia W, Stubbs Brendon, Hollands Gareth J, Jebb Susan A
Division of Psychology, University of Stirling, Stirling, UK, FK9 4LA.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2018 Feb 27;2(2):CD009315. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD009315.pub2.
Nutritional labelling is advocated as a means to promote healthier food purchasing and consumption, including lower energy intake. Internationally, many different nutritional labelling schemes have been introduced. There is no consensus on whether such labelling is effective in promoting healthier behaviour.
To assess the impact of nutritional labelling for food and non-alcoholic drinks on purchasing and consumption of healthier items. Our secondary objective was to explore possible effect moderators of nutritional labelling on purchasing and consumption.
We searched 13 electronic databases including CENTRAL, MEDLINE and Embase to 26 April 2017. We also handsearched references and citations and sought unpublished studies through websites and trials registries.
Eligible studies: were randomised or quasi-randomised controlled trials (RCTs/Q-RCTs), controlled before-and-after studies, or interrupted time series (ITS) studies; compared a labelled product (with information on nutrients or energy) with the same product without a nutritional label; assessed objectively measured purchasing or consumption of foods or non-alcoholic drinks in real-world or laboratory settings.
Two authors independently selected studies for inclusion and extracted study data. We applied the Cochrane 'Risk of bias' tool and GRADE to assess the quality of evidence. We pooled studies that evaluated similar interventions and outcomes using a random-effects meta-analysis, and we synthesised data from other studies in a narrative summary.
We included 28 studies, comprising 17 RCTs, 5 Q-RCTs and 6 ITS studies. Most (21/28) took place in the USA, and 19 took place in university settings, 14 of which mainly involved university students or staff. Most (20/28) studies assessed the impact of labelling on menus or menu boards, or nutritional labelling placed on, or adjacent to, a range of foods or drinks from which participants could choose. Eight studies provided participants with only one labelled food or drink option (in which labelling was present on a container or packaging, adjacent to the food or on a display board) and measured the amount consumed. The most frequently assessed labelling type was energy (i.e. calorie) information (12/28).Eleven studies assessed the impact of nutritional labelling on purchasing food or drink options in real-world settings, including purchases from vending machines (one cluster-RCT), grocery stores (one ITS), or restaurants, cafeterias or coffee shops (three RCTs, one Q-RCT and five ITS). Findings on vending machines and grocery stores were not interpretable, and were rated as very low quality. A meta-analysis of the three RCTs, all of which assessed energy labelling on menus in restaurants, demonstrated a statistically significant reduction of 47 kcal in energy purchased (MD -46.72 kcal, 95% CI -78.35, -15.10, N = 1877). Assuming an average meal of 600 kcal, energy labelling on menus would reduce energy purchased per meal by 7.8% (95% CI 2.5% to 13.1%). The quality of the evidence for these three studies was rated as low, so our confidence in the effect estimate is limited and may change with further studies. Of the remaining six studies, only two (both ITS studies involving energy labels on menus or menus boards in a coffee shop or cafeteria) were at low risk of bias, and their results support the meta-analysis. The results of the other four studies which were conducted in a restaurant, cafeterias (2 studies) or a coffee shop, were not clearly reported and were at high risk of bias.Seventeen studies assessed the impact of nutritional labels on consumption in artificial settings or scenarios (henceforth referred to as laboratory studies or settings). Of these, eight (all RCTs) assessed the effect of labels on menus or placed on a range of food options. A meta-analysis of these studies did not conclusively demonstrate a reduction in energy consumed during a meal (MD -50 kcal, 95% CI -104.41, 3.88, N = 1705). We rated the quality of the evidence as low, so our confidence in the effect estimate is limited and may change with further studies.Six laboratory studies (four RCTs and two Q-RCTs) assessed the impact of labelling a single food or drink option (such as chocolate, pasta or soft drinks) on energy consumed during a snack or meal. A meta-analysis of these studies did not demonstrate a statistically significant difference in energy (kcal) consumed (SMD 0.05, 95% CI -0.17 to 0.27, N = 732). However, the confidence intervals were wide, suggesting uncertainty in the true effect size. We rated the quality of the evidence as low, so our confidence in the effect estimate is limited and may change with further studies.There was no evidence that nutritional labelling had the unintended harm of increasing energy purchased or consumed. Indirect evidence came from five laboratory studies that involved mislabelling single nutrient content (i.e. placing low energy or low fat labels on high-energy foods) during a snack or meal. A meta-analysis of these studies did not demonstrate a statistically significant increase in energy (kcal) consumed (SMD 0.19, 95% CI -0.14to 0.51, N = 718). The effect was small and the confidence intervals wide, suggesting uncertainty in the true effect size. We rated the quality of the evidence from these studies as very low, providing very little confidence in the effect estimate.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Findings from a small body of low-quality evidence suggest that nutritional labelling comprising energy information on menus may reduce energy purchased in restaurants. The evidence assessing the impact on consumption of energy information on menus or on a range of food options in laboratory settings suggests a similar effect to that observed for purchasing, although the evidence is less definite and also of low quality.Accordingly, and in the absence of observed harms, we tentatively suggest that nutritional labelling on menus in restaurants could be used as part of a wider set of measures to tackle obesity. Additional high-quality research in real-world settings is needed to enable more certain conclusions.Further high-quality research is also needed to address the dearth of evidence from grocery stores and vending machines and to assess potential moderators of the intervention effect, including socioeconomic status.
营养标签被视为促进更健康食品购买和消费(包括降低能量摄入)的一种手段。在国际上,已引入了许多不同的营养标签方案。对于此类标签是否能有效促进更健康的行为,尚无共识。
评估食品和非酒精饮料的营养标签对更健康食品的购买和消费的影响。我们的次要目标是探讨营养标签对购买和消费可能产生影响的调节因素。
我们检索了13个电子数据库,包括截至2017年4月26日的Cochrane系统评价数据库、MEDLINE和Embase。我们还手工检索了参考文献和引用文献,并通过网站和试验注册库查找未发表的研究。
符合条件的研究:为随机或半随机对照试验(RCTs/Q - RCTs)、前后对照研究或中断时间序列(ITS)研究;将贴有标签的产品(带有营养或能量信息)与未贴营养标签的同一产品进行比较;在现实世界或实验室环境中客观测量食品或非酒精饮料的购买或消费情况。
两位作者独立选择纳入研究并提取研究数据。我们应用Cochrane“偏倚风险”工具和GRADE来评估证据质量。我们使用随机效应荟萃分析对评估相似干预措施和结果的研究进行合并,并以叙述性总结的方式综合其他研究的数据。
我们纳入了28项研究,包括17项RCTs、5项Q - RCTs和6项ITS研究。大多数研究(21/28)在美国进行,19项在大学环境中开展,其中14项主要涉及大学生或教职工。大多数研究(20/28)评估了标签对菜单或菜单板的影响,或对一系列可供参与者选择的食品或饮料上或其旁边放置的营养标签的影响。八项研究仅为参与者提供一种贴有标签的食品或饮料选择(标签出现在容器或包装上、食品旁边或展示板上),并测量其摄入量。最常评估的标签类型是能量(即卡路里)信息(12/28)。
11项研究评估了营养标签对现实世界环境中食品或饮料选择购买的影响,包括从自动售货机购买(一项整群RCT)、杂货店购买(一项ITS),或餐厅、自助餐厅或咖啡店购买(三项RCTs、一项Q - RCT和五项ITS)。关于自动售货机和杂货店的研究结果无法解读,质量被评为极低。对三项均评估餐厅菜单上能量标签的RCTs进行的荟萃分析表明,购买的能量有统计学意义的减少,减少了47千卡(MD - 46.72千卡,95%CI - 78.35, - 15.10,N = 1877)。假设一顿饭平均600千卡,菜单上的能量标签将使每餐购买的能量减少7.8%(95%CI 2.5%至13.1%)。这三项研究的证据质量被评为低,因此我们对效应估计值的信心有限,且可能会随进一步研究而改变。在其余六项研究中,只有两项(均为ITS研究,涉及咖啡店或自助餐厅菜单或菜单板上的能量标签)偏倚风险较低,其结果支持荟萃分析。在餐厅、自助餐厅(两项研究)或咖啡店进行的其他四项研究结果报告不清晰,偏倚风险较高。
17项研究评估了营养标签在人工环境或场景中对消费的影响(以下简称实验室研究或环境)。其中,八项(均为RCTs)评估了标签对菜单或一系列食品选项的影响。对这些研究的荟萃分析并未确凿证明用餐期间消耗的能量有所减少(MD - 50千卡,95%CI - 104.41,3.88,N = 1705)。我们将证据质量评为低,因此我们对效应估计值的信心有限,且可能会随进一步研究而改变。
六项实验室研究(四项RCTs和两项Q - RCTs)评估了对单一食品或饮料选项(如巧克力、意大利面或软饮料)贴标签对零食或用餐期间消耗能量的影响。对这些研究的荟萃分析并未证明消耗的能量(千卡)有统计学意义的差异(SMD 0.05,95%CI - 0.17至0.27,N = 732)。然而,置信区间较宽,表明真实效应大小存在不确定性。我们将这些研究的证据质量评为低,因此我们对效应估计值的信心有限,且可能会随进一步研究而改变。
没有证据表明营养标签会产生增加购买或消耗能量的意外危害。间接证据来自五项实验室研究,这些研究涉及在零食或用餐期间对单一营养素含量进行错误标注(即在高能量食品上贴上低能量或低脂肪标签)。对这些研究的荟萃分析并未证明消耗的能量(千卡)有统计学意义的增加(SMD 0.19,95%CI - 0.14至0.51,N = 718)。效应较小且置信区间较宽,表明真实效应大小存在不确定性。我们将这些研究的证据质量评为极低,对效应估计值几乎没有信心。
少量低质量证据的研究结果表明,包含菜单上能量信息的营养标签可能会减少餐厅的能量购买量。评估菜单上能量信息或实验室环境中一系列食品选项对消费影响的证据表明,其效果与购买情况类似,尽管证据不太确凿且质量也较低。
因此,在未观察到危害的情况下,我们初步建议餐厅菜单上的营养标签可作为应对肥胖的一系列更广泛措施的一部分。需要在现实世界环境中进行更多高质量研究,以得出更确定的结论。
还需要进一步的高质量研究来解决杂货店和自动售货机方面证据不足的问题,并评估干预效果的潜在调节因素,包括社会经济地位。