National University of Natural Medicine, Helfgott Research Institute, Portland, Oregon, USA.
Seattle Health Arts Center, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Nutr Rev. 2019 Jun 1;77(6):363-375. doi: 10.1093/nutrit/nuz003.
Elevated serum concentration of high-sensitivity C-reactive protein (hsCRP), a biomarker of systemic inflammation, is associated with increased risk for coronary heart disease (CHD) and cardiovascular events (CVEs). Because elevations in hsCRP often occur in parallel with elevations in low-density lipoproteins (LDLs) and both biomarkers are reduced by hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA reductase inhibitors (ie, statin drugs), efforts to determine nonpharmacological treatments to lower hsCRP remain limited. Dietary modifications in particular are rarely discussed as viable clinical interventions yet merit investigation.
This systematic review was performed to assess the relationship between dietary patterns and hsCRP among individuals enrolled in randomized controlled trials.
National Library of Medicine (ie, MEDLINE) and Google Scholar searches were performed using the search terms "C-reactive protein," "CRP," "dietary pattern," and/or "diet" to identify articles published between January 2000 and October 2017.
Data were extracted and analyzed according to PRISMA guidelines. Identified abstracts were reviewed and cross-referenced for relevance to dietary pattern. Full-text manuscripts were then abstracted for their principal findings. Fifty-six manuscripts met inclusion criteria for detailed review.
Clinical trials of dietary interventions to reduce hsCRP are mixed in quality and findings. Several specific dietary patterns may reduce hsCRP, including low-fat, low-carbohydrate, Mediterranean, Portfolio, Paleolithic, and the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diets. However, results were mixed for the majority of dietary patterns (eg, low-glycemic load diets).
Information available to date suggests that a wide variety of dietary patterns may impact serum hsCRP, although studies are mixed in quality. The efficacy of dietary patterns for the treatment of elevated hsCRP as a strategy for primary prevention of CHD may be best elucidated in randomized clinical trials in healthy participants with elevated hsCRP but low or normal traditional risk factors, or by using more aggressive dietary modifications in high-risk patients. Given current incidence and prevalence of CHD risk factors, additional randomized controlled trials of this type are justified and needed.
高敏 C 反应蛋白(hsCRP)是一种全身性炎症的生物标志物,其血清浓度升高与冠心病(CHD)和心血管事件(CVE)的风险增加相关。由于 hsCRP 的升高通常与低密度脂蛋白(LDLs)的升高同时发生,并且这两种生物标志物都可被羟甲基戊二酰辅酶 A 还原酶抑制剂(即他汀类药物)降低,因此降低 hsCRP 的非药物治疗方法仍然有限。饮食的改变尤其很少被讨论为可行的临床干预措施,但值得进一步研究。
本系统评价旨在评估随机对照试验中个体的饮食模式与 hsCRP 之间的关系。
美国国家医学图书馆(即 MEDLINE)和 Google Scholar 搜索使用了“C 反应蛋白”、“CRP”、“饮食模式”和/或“饮食”等搜索词,以确定 2000 年 1 月至 2017 年 10 月期间发表的文章。
根据 PRISMA 指南提取和分析数据。对确定的摘要进行了审查,并相互参照与饮食模式的相关性。然后提取全文摘要其主要发现。有 56 篇手稿符合详细审查的纳入标准。
降低 hsCRP 的饮食干预临床试验的质量和结果参差不齐。一些特定的饮食模式可能会降低 hsCRP,包括低脂、低碳水化合物、地中海、Portfolio、原始人、以及高血压饮食治疗法(DASH)。然而,大多数饮食模式(例如,低血糖负荷饮食)的结果则喜忧参半。
目前的信息表明,多种饮食模式可能会影响血清 hsCRP,尽管研究的质量参差不齐。在 hsCRP 升高但传统危险因素低或正常的健康参与者或在高危患者中使用更激进的饮食改变的情况下,通过随机临床试验评估饮食模式治疗升高的 hsCRP 作为 CHD 一级预防策略的疗效可能会更好。鉴于目前 CHD 危险因素的发生率和流行率,有理由开展并需要更多此类随机对照试验。