Department of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine, University Hospital of the Saarland, Homburg, Germany.
Nutritional Insight, Surrey, United Kingdom.
Adv Nutr. 2022 Dec 22;13(6):2445-2457. doi: 10.1093/advances/nmac082.
We studied associations between prenatal and early postnatal choline intake, brain development, and neurocognitive function of children. We conducted a systematic review followed by a meta-analysis and critical appraisal of human studies published from 1997 to 2021. Thirty publications were identified. The meta-analysis included 5 of 7 case-control studies studying neural tube defects (NTDs) in relation to maternal choline intakes/circulating concentrations. Low maternal choline intake/circulating concentrations were associated with a higher OR for NTDs among 1131 mothers of newborns with NTDs and 4439 control mothers (pooled estimate = 1.36; 95% CI: 1.11, 1.67). The 95% prediction intervals were 0.78, 2.36. Findings and critical evaluation of 10 publications with interventional designs showed that higher maternal choline intakes during the second half of pregnancy and early postnatal period (550 mg up to 1 g/d on top of the diet) or a child intake of 513 to 625 mg/d from supplements were safe and likely to demonstrate favorable effects on several domains of child neurocognition, such as memory, attention, and visuospatial learning versus the comparators. Findings from observational studies (n = 13) partly supported the association between maternal choline intake/serum concentrations and child neurocognition, but there was low confidence in the use of plasma choline concentrations as a choline intake marker. In conclusion, low maternal choline intakes were associated with a higher OR for NTDs. The risk could be up to 2.36-fold in some populations. Despite limitations of available trials and observational studies, higher maternal choline intake was likely to be associated with better child neurocognition/neurodevelopment. The results should be used to guide choline intake recommendations in pregnancy and lactation, especially because most young women are not achieving the reference intake of choline. This meta-analysis is registered at PROSPERO as CRD42021233790.
我们研究了产前和产后早期胆碱摄入、大脑发育和儿童神经认知功能之间的关系。我们进行了系统评价,随后对 1997 年至 2021 年期间发表的人类研究进行了荟萃分析和批判性评估。确定了 30 篇出版物。荟萃分析包括 7 项病例对照研究中的 5 项,研究了母体胆碱摄入量/循环浓度与神经管缺陷 (NTD) 的关系。在 1131 名患有 NTD 的新生儿母亲和 4439 名对照母亲中,低母体胆碱摄入量/循环浓度与 NTD 的更高比值比相关(汇总估计值=1.36;95%CI:1.11,1.67)。95%预测区间为 0.78,2.36。对 10 项干预设计出版物的发现和批判性评估表明,在妊娠后半期和产后早期(在饮食基础上增加 550 毫克至 1 克/天)或儿童从补充剂中摄入 513 至 625 毫克/天,较高的母体胆碱摄入量是安全的,并且可能对儿童神经认知的几个领域产生有利影响,例如记忆、注意力和视空间学习,与对照组相比。观察性研究(n=13)的结果部分支持了母体胆碱摄入量/血清浓度与儿童神经认知之间的关联,但使用血浆胆碱浓度作为胆碱摄入量标志物的可信度较低。总之,低母体胆碱摄入量与 NTD 的更高比值比相关。在某些人群中,风险可能高达 2.36 倍。尽管可用试验和观察性研究存在局限性,但较高的母体胆碱摄入量可能与儿童更好的神经认知/神经发育相关。这些结果应被用来指导妊娠和哺乳期的胆碱摄入量建议,特别是因为大多数年轻女性没有达到胆碱的参考摄入量。本荟萃分析在 PROSPERO 注册,注册号为 CRD42021233790。