临床营养干预中少数种族和族裔群体代表性文献的系统性回顾。

Jaapna Dhillon, Ashley G Jacobs, Sigry Ortiz, L Karina Diaz Rios
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引用次数: 0

摘要

饮食相关慢性疾病的种族和民族差异是人们关注的主要问题。本系统综述研究了在有 2 个或 2 个以上饮食臂的随机试验中,招募了少数族裔和非西班牙裔白人群体,按种族或族裔报告和讨论饮食引起的健康结果变化的程度,如心脏代谢、炎症、癌症、骨骼健康和肾功能结果等。对截至 2021 年 8 月的数据库(即 PubMed、Cochrane Library 和 Web of Science)进行了检索。系统性综述纳入了 34 项研究,这些研究讨论了与非西班牙裔白人相比,确定的饮食干预对少数种族或族裔群体健康结果的影响(PROSPERO 注册号:CRD42021229256)。在分析中考虑了种族或民族因素的急性试验和有一个饮食臂的试验,以及关注单一种族或民族群体的研究将分别讨论。大多数研究都是在黑人与白人成年人中进行的,测试能量限制、宏量营养素调整、钠减少或膳食疗法(DASH)的变化对心脏代谢结果的影响。对其他少数群体的关注有限。有证据表明,与白人相比,黑人成年人的血压降低幅度更大,尤其是在采用 DASH(或类似)饮食的情况下。总体而言,对特定群体饮食模式和饮食可接受性的考虑有限。总体偏差风险较低。新出现的精准营养计划旨在通过量身定制的方法优化人口亚群的代谢反应,因此必须确保充分代表种族和民族亚群,以解决健康差异问题。应纳入有助于解释反应差异的因素,如社会生态环境,并进行充分的研究。鉴于慢性病的种族和民族差异,研究饮食干预措施在不同群体中的采用、维持及对健康结果的影响,对于开发可减轻与饮食相关的健康差异的方法至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A Systematic Review of Literature on the Representation of Racial and Ethnic Minority Groups in Clinical Nutrition Interventions.

The racial and ethnic disparities in diet-related chronic diseases are major concerns. This systematic review examines the extent to which diet-induced changes in health outcomes, such as cardiometabolic, inflammation, cancer, bone health, and kidney function outcomes, etc., have been reported and discussed by race or ethnicity in randomized trials with 2 or more diet arms that recruited both minority and non-Hispanic White groups. Databases (i.e., PubMed, Cochrane Library, and Web of Science) were searched up to August 2021. Thirty-four studies that discussed effects of defined dietary interventions on health outcomes by racial or ethnic minority group compared with non-Hispanic Whites were included in the systematic review (PROSPERO registration number: CRD42021229256). Acute trials and those with 1 diet arm that accounted for race or ethnicity in their analyses and studies that focused on a single racial or ethnic group were discussed separately. Most studies were conducted in Black compared with White adults testing effects of energy restriction, macronutrient modification, sodium reduction, or variations of the Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension (DASH) diet on cardiometabolic outcomes. There was limited focus on other minority groups. Evidence suggests greater blood pressure reduction for Black adults compared with Whites particularly with DASH (or similar) diets. Overall, there was limited consideration for group-specific eating patterns and diet acceptability. Overall risk of bias was low. With emerging precision nutrition initiatives that aim to optimize metabolic responses in population subgroups through tailored approaches, it is imperative to ensure adequate representation of racial and ethnic subgroups for addressing health disparities. Factors that help explain variability in responses such as socioecological context should be included and adequately powered. Given the racial and ethnic disparities in chronic diseases, studying the adoption, maintenance, and effectiveness of dietary interventions on health outcomes among different groups is critical for developing approaches that can mitigate diet-related health disparities.

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