Associations between Dietary Patterns and Inflammatory Markers during Pregnancy: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Study Characteristics
3.2. Dietary Patterns
3.3. Dietary Assessment
3.4. Peripheral Markers of Inflammation
3.5. Risk of Bias Assessment
3.6. Dietary Patterns and Inflammatory Markers
3.6.1. Proportions of Protein, Cholesterol, and/or Fiber
3.6.2. Anti-/Pro-Inflammatory Diet
3.6.3. High/Low GI/GL Diet
3.6.4. Mediterranean Diet, DASH Diet, Anti-Atherogenic Diet, and Omega-3 Fatty Acid-Enriched Diet
4. Discussion
4.1. Evidence from the Observational Studies
4.2. Evidence from the Intervention Studies
4.3. Anti-Inflammatory Markers and Inflammation Resolution
4.4. Strengths and Limitations
4.5. Implications for Clinical Practice and Research
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study Design | Reference -Country/Sample Size | Maternal Age (Years Old) | Health Status and Gestational Age at Enrollment | Dietary Exposure /Control | Dietary Assessment Tool (FFQ Reference Period) Time of Dietary Data Collection | Time of Blood Collection | Examined Inflammatory Markers | Main Findings | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Prospective cohort study | de Oliveira et al., 2015 -Brazil [11] | 115 | 20–40 | Healthy; 5–13 weeks of gestation | Glycemic load (GL) ≥ median /Glycemic load (GL) < median | A 73-item FFQ (a 12-month reference period) [67] collected at weeks 20–26 of gestation. | (Fasting) blood sample at 3 timepoints (weeks 5–13, 20–26, 30–36 of gestation) | CRP | Dietary glycemic load was negatively associated with CRP concentrations (β = –0.203; 95% CI, –0.380 to –0.026, p = 0.025). |
Lindsay et al., 2018 -USA [50] | 202 | >18 | Healthy during the first or early second trimester | Anti-/pro- inflammatory diet | Interviewer administered 24-h dietary recalls collected at mean week 12.9 ± 1.7, 20.5 ± 1.4, and 30.4 ± 1.4 of gestation. | Day 6 of each assessment period at 10–12 weeks, 20–22 weeks, 30–32 weeks of gestation | TNF-α | The DII scores ranged from –4.3 to 3.7 using 32 food parameters. DII was positively associated with TNF-α (β = 0.093, 95% CI: 0.023–0.163, p = 0.010). | |
McCullough et al., 2017 -USA [49] | 1057 | ≥18 | Ethnically diverse; <12 weeks of gestation | Anti-/pro- inflammatory diet | FFQ (a 6-month reference period) during peri-conceptional stage) at 3-time points: enrollment (median ~ 12 weeks), the second trimester (diet in the first trimester), between 36 weeks of gestation to delivery (diet in the last 2 trimesters), and at delivery as needed. | The blood sample was taken before 12 weeks of gestation | INFγ, IL-12, IL-17A, IL-1β, IL-4, IL-6, and TNF-α | The E-DII scores ranged from –5.00 to 4.96 using 27 food parameters. The correlation between maternal E-DII and circulating cytokines was not significant (p > 0.05). | |
Moore et al., 2018 -USA [51] | 511 | ≥16 (28 ± 6) | Healthy singleton pregnancy; <24 weeks of gestation | Anti-/pro- inflammatory diet | One ASA24 per month. At least one per participant. Visits in early pregnancy (median 17 weeks of gestation), mid-pregnancy (median 27 weeks of gestation), and at delivery (median 1 day after delivery) | Blood sample at 27 weeks of gestation | IL-6, hs-CRP | The DII scores ranged from –4.4 to 4.0 using 28 food parameters. For each 1 unit increase in the DII, a 0.12 mg/L increase in IL-6 levels was detected at 27 weeks of gestation (95% CI, 0.01–0.24; p = 0.03). No association was observed with hs-CRP (p = 0.27). | |
Study Design | Reference -Country/Sample Size | Maternal Age (Years Old) | Health Status and Gestational Age at Enrollment | Dietary Exposure /Control | Dietary Assessment Tool (FFQ Reference Period) Time of Dietary Data Collection | Time of Blood Collection | Examined Inflammatory Markers | Main Findings | |
Prospective cohort study | Scholl et al., 2011 -US [3] | 520 | Teenage and 19–32 [70] | Healthy; <20 weeks of gestation | The proportion of multiple dietary components | Two 24 dietary recalls at entry into prenatal care and at weeks 20–28 of gestation | (GCT) at entry into prenatal care | hs-CRP | Higher intakes of protein (p = 0.002) and cholesterol (p = 0.0016) with a lower intake of carbohydrate (p = 0.023), as well as a higher dietary glycemic index (p = 0.013) were associated with increased hs-CRP. only among lean gravidae (BMI <25 kg/m2). |
Sen et al., 2016 -USA [52] | 1808 | 32.2 ± 5.0 | Non-diabetic at median 9.9 weeks of gestation | Anti-/pro- inflammatory diet | A 146-item FFQ and 33 items for a supplement intake assessment [71] (last menstrual period for the first trimester or previous three months during the second trimester). | (GCT) at weeks 22–31 of gestation | CRP | The DII scores ranged from –5.4 to 3.7 using 28 food parameters. Higher DII was associated with higher plasma CRP in the second trimester (β = 0.08, 95% CI: 0.02–0.14). | |
Yang et al., 2020 -China [56] | 307 | 28.5 ± 3.4 | Healthy with normal BMI; 16–20 weeks of gestation | Anti-/pro- inflammatory diet | Dietary recall for three consecutive days since the date of enrollment around 16–20 weeks of pregnancy. | (Fasting) after dietary assessment in the second trimester | hs-CRP | The odds of having high levels of hs-CRP in pro-inflammatory diet group were 1.89 times greater than the odds of having high levels of hs-CRP in the anti-inflammatory diet group (95% CI: 1.05, 3.42, p = 0.043). | |
Randomized controlled clinical trial | Asemi et al., 2013 -Iran [54] | 32 | 18–40 | GDM; 24–28 weeks of gestation | DASH /based on recommended acceptable dietary intake for GDM | Three-day food diaries throughout 4-week intervention period (24–28 weeks of gestation). | (Fasting) blood sample at 24–28 weeks of gestation and after 4-week intervention period | hs-CRP | Difference in mean change of serum hs-CRP between DASH and control diet was not significant (p > 0.05). |
Study Design | Reference -Country/Sample Size | Maternal Age (Years Old) | Health Status and Gestational Age at Enrollment | Dietary Exposure /Control | Dietary Assessment Tool (FFQ Reference Period) Time of Dietary Data Collection | Time of Blood Collection | Examined Inflammatory Markers | Main Findings | |
Randomized controlled clinical trial | Garcia-Rodriguez et al., 2012 -United Kingdom [58] | 123 | 18–40 | Healthy; <19 weeks of gestation | Twice a week (150 g/portion) of salmon /habitual diet low in oily fish | A 100-item FFQ (a 12-week reference period) [66] collected at weeks 19/20 and 34 of gestation; a diary between week 20 of gestation to delivery. | (Fasting) blood sample at week 20, weeks 32–34 of gestation and at week 38 of gestation | IL-8, IL-6, TNF-α, HGF, NGF, MCP-1 sCAMs (E-selectin, ICAM-1, VCAM-1) | Inflammatory and vascular homeostasis biomarkers were not affected by the intake of farmed salmon (p > 0.05). |
Khoury et al., 2007 -Norway [59] | 290 | 21–38 | Healthy, non-smoking; 17–20 weeks of gestation | Anti-atherogenic diet (low in saturated fat and cholesterol) /usual diet | Weighed recordings of intake from baseline weeks 17–20 to week 36 of gestation. | Blood sample at weeks 17–20, week 24, week 30, and week 36 of gestation | hs-CRP, sCAMs (sVCAM-1, sICAM-1 and E-selectin) | None of the biomarkers were influenced by the intervention (low saturated fat/low cholesterol diet) compared to the control group (usual diet) (p > 0.05). | |
Markovic et al., 2016 (GI baby3) -Australia [61] | 139 | >18 | At high risk of GDM; 12–20 weeks of gestation | Low glycemic index (LGI) /high-fiber, moderate GI diet | Two 3-day food records collected at weeks 14–20 and 36 of gestation and three 24-hour dietary recalls as dietary compliance measure collected at weeks 18–24, 22–28, 26–32 of gestation; five dietary consultations from weeks 14–20 through 34–36 of gestation. | (Fasting) at mean week 17.4 ± 2 and at week 36 of gestation | CRP | Difference in CRP between the low glycemic diet group and high fiber group was not significant at the end of the intervention period (p > 0.05). | |
Cross-sectional | Hrolfsdottir ^ et al., 2016 -Denmark [60] | 671 | 29 ± 4 | Healthy; 283 ± 11 days of gestation | Protein intake and distribution between animal and plant sources | A 3-item self-administered FFQ combined with an interview (a 3-month reference period) [72] collected at week 30 of gestation. | Blood sample at week 30 of gestation | hs-CRP, SAA, IL-6, IL-8, IL-1β, TNF-α | Women in the highest compared to the lowest quintile of animal protein intake had 25% (95% CI: 2–53, p = 0.004) higher hsCRP concentrations. A similar pattern was observed for SAA (23%, 95% CI: 4–47, p = 0.003). Fiber intake was inversely associated with IL-8 (–24%, 95% CI: –37 to –9, p = 0.028). |
Study Design | Reference -Country/Sample Size | Maternal Age (Years Old) | Health Status and Gestational Age at Enrollment | Dietary Exposure /Control | Dietary Assessment Tool (FFQ Reference Period) Time of Dietary Data Collection | Time of Blood Collection | Examined Inflammatory Markers | Main Findings | |
Cross-sectional | Papazian et al., 2019 -Lebanon [57] | 100 | 18–40 | Healthy singleton pregnancy; 14–27 weeks of gestation | Mediterranean diet adherence | A 157-item FFQ (12 categories of food groups; unspecified reference period) and one 24-hour recall collected between 14 and 27 weeks of gestation. | (Fasting) blood collection in the second trimester of pregnancy | CRP | Higher Mediterranean diet score was associated with lower CRP levels. MFP (OR: 0.90, 95% CI: 0.82–0.99, p = 0.03); MDS (OR: 0.88, 95% CI: 0.78–0.99, p = 0.04); Med Diet Score (OR: 0.88, 95% CI: 0.80–0.98, p = 0.02); SMDQ (OR: 0.91, 95%CI: 0.83–0.99, p = 0.04). |
Roytio et al. #, 2017 -Finland [62] | 100 | 30.1 ± 4.7 | Overweight and obese; ≤17 weeks of gestation | Three groups: low fiber/moderate fat ; high fiber/moderate fat; low fiber/high fat | One 3-day food diary per participant within the week before the study visit. | (Fasting) at mean week 13.3 ± 2.4 of gestation | hs-CRP, GlycA | Recommended dietary intake (DRI) of total fat and fiber was associated with lower levels of GlycA. Correlations between fiber total and GlycA were significant (r = 0.316, p = 0.01). No association was found between microbiota or intakes of nutrients and hs-CRP (p > 0.05). | |
Shin et al., 2017 -USA [53] | 561 | 20–44 [73] | NHANES samples at mean 5.35 ± 0.4 months of gestation | Anti-/pro- inflammatory diet | Single 24-hour dietary recall in the second trimester. | Blood sample in the second trimester | CRP | The DII scores ranged from –4.98 to 4.14 using 27 food parameters. DII was not associated with CRP (p > 0.05). Women who were obese before pregnancy had increased odds for being in the highest tertile of the DII and highest tertile of CRP concentration compared to women with normal weight. | |
Study Design | Reference -Country/Sample Size | Maternal Age (Years Old) | Health Status and Gestational Age at Enrollment | Dietary Exposure /Control | Dietary Assessment Tool (FFQ Reference Period) Time of Dietary Data Collection | Time of Blood Collection | Examined Inflammatory Markers | Main Findings | |
Cross-sectional | Walsh et al. *, 2014 -Ireland [63] | 621 | ≥18 | Secondigravid whose baby had macrosomia (birth weight > 4000 g) [74] | Low glycemic index (LGI) advice /not receiving LGI advice | A five-point Likert-type scale as an adherence measure at week 34 of gestation. | (Fasting) blood sample at mean week 13.8 ± 2.4 and 28 weeks of gestation | TNF-α, IL-6 | Differences between those who did and those who did not receive low-GI dietary advice were not significant with respect to the concentrations of serum TNF-α or IL-6 in early pregnancy (prior to the intervention) or at 28 weeks of gestation (p > 0.05). |
Case-control | Vahid et al., 2017 -Iran [55] | 135 | 20–45 | With a history of 3 or more miscarriages after week 20 of gestation | Anti-/pro- inflammatory diet | A 168-item FFQ (a 12-month reference period [68]). | Unspecified | IL-6, CRP | The DII scores ranged from –0.50 to 2.70 using 31 food parameters. For every 1 unit increase in DII, a corresponding increase in IL-6 by 0.15 pg/mL was detected (95% CI: <0.01–0.28, p = 0.04); no significant association was observed with CRP (p = 0.22). |
Study Design | First Author, Year | Selection Bias | Study Design | Confounders | Blinding | Data Collection Methods | Withdrawals/ Dropouts | Global Rating |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Prospective cohort studies | de Oliveira et al., 2015 [11] | m | m | s | w | m | s | Moderate |
Lindsay et al., 2018 [50] | m | m | s | w | s | m | Moderate | |
McCullough et al., 2017 [49] | m | m | s | w | s | s | Moderate | |
Moore et al., 2018 [51] | m | m | s | w | s | m | Moderate | |
Scholl et al., 2011 [3] | s | m | s | w | s | m | Moderate | |
Sen et al., 2016 [52] | m | m | s | w | s | s | Moderate | |
Yang et al., 2020 [56] | m | m | m | w | s | s | Moderate | |
Intervention studies | Asemi et al., 2013 [54] | s | s | s | s | s | s | Strong |
Garcia-Rodriguez et al., 2012 [58] | m | s | s | m | m | s | Strong | |
Khoury et al., 2007 [59] | m | s | s | m | w | m | Moderate | |
Markovic et al., 2016 [61] | w | s | s | m | s | s | Moderate | |
Cross-sectional studies | Hrolfsdottir ^ et al., 2016 [60] | m | m | s | w | m | m | Moderate |
Papazian et al., 2019 [57] | m | m | w | w | s | s | Weak | |
Roytio # et al., 2017 [62] | w | m | w | w | s | s | Weak | |
Shin et al., 2017 [53] | m | m | s | s | m | m | Strong | |
Walsh * et al., 2014 [63] | m | m | s | w | s | s | Moderate | |
Case–control studies | Vahid et al., 2017 [55] | m | m | m | w | s | m | Moderate |
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Yeh, K.-L.; Kautz, A.; Lohse, B.; Groth, S.W. Associations between Dietary Patterns and Inflammatory Markers during Pregnancy: A Systematic Review. Nutrients 2021, 13, 834. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13030834
Yeh K-L, Kautz A, Lohse B, Groth SW. Associations between Dietary Patterns and Inflammatory Markers during Pregnancy: A Systematic Review. Nutrients. 2021; 13(3):834. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13030834
Chicago/Turabian StyleYeh, Kuan-Lin, Amber Kautz, Barbara Lohse, and Susan W. Groth. 2021. "Associations between Dietary Patterns and Inflammatory Markers during Pregnancy: A Systematic Review" Nutrients 13, no. 3: 834. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13030834
APA StyleYeh, K. -L., Kautz, A., Lohse, B., & Groth, S. W. (2021). Associations between Dietary Patterns and Inflammatory Markers during Pregnancy: A Systematic Review. Nutrients, 13(3), 834. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13030834