Department of Center of Evidence Based Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Sumatera Utara, Medan, North Sumatera, Indonesia.
Department of Neurosurgery, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Sumatera Utara, Medan, North Sumatera, Indonesia.
PLoS One. 2024 Aug 21;19(8):e0301564. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0301564. eCollection 2024.
Mediterranean Diet has been reported to possess immunomodulatory and anti-inflammatory properties. These properties are closely associated with the immunopathogenesis of COVID-19.
The present systematic review aimed to determine the association between Mediterranean Diet and COVID-19, COVID-19 symptoms, and COVID-19 severity.
The protocol for this systematic review was registered in International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO) with identification number CRD42023451794. The literature search was conducted through Pubmed, Proquest, and Google Scholar on August 2023. The inclusion criteria were studies with a population of human subjects, reported the association between Mediterranean diet adherence with risk of COVID-19 infection, COVID-19 symptoms, or COVID-19 severity, and full text must be available in English. The exclusion criteria were reviews, editorials, letters, replies, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, studies on animals, and duplicates. Risk of bias in included studies was assessed using Newcastle Ottawa Scale (NOS). Data was synthesized narratively. Each study was compared and a structured summary was developed.
After selection process, 6 articles were included, with a sample size of 55,489 patients. All studies were observational studies and assessed Mediterranean diet adherence using food frequency questionnaires (FFQ), with scoring system varied between each study. Four studies found a significant correlation between increased adherence to Mediterranean Diet and reduced COVID-19 risk, while one study indicated non-significant association. One study reported a significant association between higher adherence to Mediterranean Diet and COVID-19 symptoms, but three studies reported non-significant association. One study found that individuals with higher adherence to Mediterranean Diet had reduced likelihood of developing severe COVID-19, however, two studies yielded inconclusive findings.
All studies used self-administrated food frequency questionnaires (FFQs), which were prone to biased responses, such as recall and estimation bias.
Lower trends of odds ratios (ORs) were consistently observed in higher Mediterranean diet adherence. In every outcome of the included studies, ORs ranged between 0.06-0.992, however, differing levels of significance were reported in each outcome.
Overall analyses suggest that high adherence to Mediterranean Diet is a protective factor against COVID-19, with unclear benefits against COVID-19 symptoms and severity.
地中海饮食被报道具有免疫调节和抗炎特性。这些特性与 COVID-19 的免疫发病机制密切相关。
本系统评价旨在确定地中海饮食与 COVID-19、COVID-19 症状和 COVID-19 严重程度之间的关系。
本系统评价的方案已在国际前瞻性系统评价注册库(PROSPERO)中注册,识别号为 CRD42023451794。文献检索于 2023 年 8 月在 Pubmed、Proquest 和 Google Scholar 进行。纳入标准为:人群为人类受试者的研究,报告地中海饮食依从性与 COVID-19 感染风险、COVID-19 症状或 COVID-19 严重程度之间的关系,且全文必须为英文。排除标准为:综述、社论、信件、回复、系统评价、荟萃分析、动物研究和重复研究。使用纽卡斯尔-渥太华量表(NOS)评估纳入研究的偏倚风险。数据以叙述方式进行综合。比较每个研究并制定结构化总结。
经过筛选过程,纳入了 6 篇文章,共有 55489 名患者。所有研究均为观察性研究,使用食物频率问卷(FFQ)评估地中海饮食的依从性,每个研究的评分系统均有所不同。四项研究发现,增加地中海饮食的依从性与 COVID-19 风险降低之间存在显著相关性,而一项研究表明无显著相关性。一项研究表明,较高的地中海饮食依从性与 COVID-19 症状之间存在显著相关性,但三项研究表明无显著相关性。一项研究发现,较高的地中海饮食依从性的个体发生严重 COVID-19 的可能性较低,但两项研究得出的结论不一致。
所有研究均使用自我管理的食物频率问卷(FFQ),这些问卷容易出现有偏倚的反应,例如回忆和估计偏倚。
在较高的地中海饮食依从性中,观察到较低的优势比(OR)趋势。在纳入研究的每个结果中,OR 范围在 0.06-0.992 之间,但每个结果报告的显著性水平不同。
总体分析表明,高度遵循地中海饮食是预防 COVID-19 的保护因素,对 COVID-19 症状和严重程度的益处尚不清楚。