β-Carotene Supplementation and Risk of Cardiovascular Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Data Sources and Searches
2.2. Inclusion Criteria
2.3. Exclusion Criteria
2.4. Data Collection and Extraction
2.5. Quality Assessment
2.6. Grading of the Evidence
2.7. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Study Identification
3.2. Study Characteristics
3.3. Risk of Bias
3.4. Incidence
3.4.1. Cardiovascular Disease Incidence
3.4.2. Myocardial Infarction Incidence
3.4.3. Stroke Incidence
3.5. Mortality
Cardiovascular, All-Cause, and Other Mortality
3.6. Subgroup and Sensitivity Analyses
3.7. Publication Bias
4. Discussion
4.1. Effects of β-Carotene on CVD Incidence
4.2. Effects of β-Carotene on CVD Mortality
4.3. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
CVD | Cardiovascular disease |
USPSTF | US Preventive Services Task Force |
RCT | Randomized Controlled Trials |
RR | Risk Ratio |
CI | Confidence Interval |
PRISMA | Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses |
UL | Tolerable upper intake level |
Appendix A
Number | Keywords |
---|---|
1 | (“beta carotene”(tiab) OR “beta carotene” (mesh) OR “beta-carotene” (tiab) OR “β carotene” (tiab) OR “β-carotene” (tiab)) AND |
2 | (“cardiovascular disease *” (tiab) OR “cardiovascular diseases” (mesh) OR CVD (tiab) OR CVDs(tiab) OR angiocardiopathy(tiab) OR angiocardiopathies (tiab) OR “coronary heart disease *” (tiab) OR CHD (tiab) OR “coronary disease *” (tiab) OR “coronary disease” (mesh) OR “coronary artery disease *” (tiab) OR “coronary artery disease” (mesh) OR CAD (tiab) OR “high blood pressure” (tiab) OR hypertension (tiab) OR hypertension (mesh) OR arrhythmia (tiab) OR arrhythmia (tiab) OR “cardiac failure” (tiab) OR “heart failure” (tiab) OR “heart failure”(mesh) OR HF (tiab) OR “viral myocarditis”(tiab) OR VMC(tiab) OR angina (tiab) OR “Angina Pectoris” (tiab) OR “Angina Pectoris” (mesh) OR stenocardia (tiab) OR “angor pectoris” (tiab) OR “rheumatic heart disease *” (tiab) OR “rheumatic heart disease” (mesh) OR “pulmonary heart disease *” (tiab) OR “pulmonary heart disease” (mesh) OR “myocardial infarction” (tiab) OR “myocardial infarction” (mesh)) AND |
3 | (“controlled clinical trial” (pt) OR “randomized controlled trial” (pt) OR “clinical trial” (pt) OR random * (tiab) OR trial * (tiab)) |
Certainty Assessment | No. of Patients | Effect | Certainty | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No. of Studies | Study Design | Risk of Bias | Inconsistancy | Indirectness | Imprecision | Other Considerations | Experimental | Control | Relative (95% CI) | |
Major Cardiovascular Disease | ||||||||||
10 | Randomized trials | Not serious a | Not serious | Serious c | Not serious | Publicaiton bias strongly suspected d | 3576/60,337 (5.9%) | 3457/60,499 (5.7%) | RR 1.03 (0.99 to 1.08) | ⨁⨁◯◯ Low |
Myocardial Infarction | ||||||||||
7 | Randomized trials | Not serious a | Not serious | Serious c | Not serious | None | 2190/46,643 (4.7%) | 2212/46,629 (4.7%) | RR 0.99 (0.93 to 1.05) | ⨁⨁⨁◯ Moderate |
Stroke | ||||||||||
6 | Randomized trials | Not serious a | Serious b | Serious c | Not serious | None | 1461/52,890 (2.8%) | 1345/52,885 (2.5%) | RR 1.17 (1.00 to 1.37) | ⨁⨁◯◯ Low |
Other CVD | ||||||||||
4 | Randomized trials | Not serious a | Not serious | Serious c | Not serious | None | 845/10,291 (8.2%) | 799/10,276 (7.8%) | RR 1.06 (0.95 to 1.18) | ⨁⨁⨁◯ Moderate |
CVD Mortality | ||||||||||
12 | Randomized trials | Not serious a | Not serious | Not serious | Not serious | None | 2761/76,244 (3.6%) | 2468/75,396 (3.3%) | RR 1.12 (1.04 to 1.19) | ⨁⨁⨁⨁ High |
All-cause Mortality | ||||||||||
6 | Randomized trials | Not serious a | Serious b | Serious c | Not serious | None | 3516/41,836 (8.4%) | 3193/41,105 (7.8%) | RR 1.08 (1.00 to 1.16) | ⨁⨁◯◯ Low |
Other Mortality | ||||||||||
3 | Randomized trials | Not serious | Serious b | Serious c | Not serious | None | 1144/29,200 (3.9%) | 907/28,325 (3.2%) | RR 1.23 (0.98 to 1.53) | ⨁⨁◯◯ Low |
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First Author | Study | Country of Origin | Sample Size | Population | Mean Age, y | Health Status | Treatment Regimen | Health Outcome | Follow-Up, y |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Leppälä et al. (2000) [16] | Alpha Tocopherol, Beta Carotene Cancer Prevention (ATBC) Study | Finland | 28,519 | Current male smokers (≥5 cigarettes/d) | 50–69 | Stroke-free at baseline | 50 mg/d of α-Tocopherol (Vitamin E), 20 mg/d of β-carotene, both, or placebo | Total stroke, subarachnoid hemorrhage, intracerebral hemorrhage, cerebral infraction | 6.0 |
Kataja-Tuomola et al.(2010) [17] | ATBC Study | Finland | 1700 | Current male smokers (≥5 cigarettes/d) | 58 | With type 2 diabetes | As described above | Total macrovascular outcomes, major coronary event, total stroke, peripheral arterial disease, total mortality | 19 |
Rapola et al. (1996) [18] | ATBC Study | Finland | 22,269 | Current male smokers (≥5 cigarettes/d) | 57 | Free of coronary heart disease | As described above | Angina pectoris | 4.7 |
Rapola et al. (1998) [19] | ATBC Study | Finland | 1795 | Current male smokers (≥5 cigarettes/d) | 58.8 | With angina pectoris at baseline, smoked 20 cigarettes a day | As described above | Recurrences of angina pectoris, major coronary events | 4–5.5 |
Rapola et al. (1997) [20] | ATBC Study | Finland | 1862 | Current male smokers (≥5 cigarettes/d) | 59–60 | With previous myocardial infarction | As described above | Major coronary events, non-fatal myocardial infarction | 5.3 |
Virtamo et al. (2003) [21] | ATBC Study | Finland | 25,563 | Current male smokers (≥5 cigarettes/d) | 63.5 | Participants who were still alive by 30 April 1993 | As described above | Cancer incidence, cause-specific mortality, total mortality | 6–8 |
Lee et al. (1999) [22] | Women’s Health Study | United States | 39,876 | Female health professionals | ≥45 | Apparently healthy | Given on alternate days, 100 mg of aspirin, or 600 IU of vitamin E, or 50 mg of β-carotene | Myocardial infarction, stroke, death from cardiovascular causes, all-cause death | 4.1 |
Cook et al. (2007) [23] | Women’s Antioxidant Cardiovascular Study | United States | 8171 | Female health professionals | ≥40 | With a history of CVD or ≥3 CVD risk factors | Vitamin C (500 mg/d), vitamin E (600 IU every other day), β-carotene (50 mg every other day), or placebo | Myocardial infarction, coronary revascularization procedures, coronary heart disease, stroke, transient ischemic attack, CVD death | 9.4 |
Hercberg et al. (2004) [24] | SU.VI.MAX Study | France | 13,017 | French adult volunteers | 49 | Free from diseases | A daily combined capsule of 120 mg of ascorbic acid, 30 mg of vitamin E, 6 mg of β-carotene, 100 g of selenium, and 20 mg of zinc, or a placebo | Cancer incidence, ischemic cardiovascular disease, mortality | 7.5 |
Catalano et al. (2007) [25] | Critical Leg Ischemia Prevention Study (CLIPS) Group | Italy | 366 | Outpatients | 66 | Peripheral arterial disease | Oral aspirin (100 mg/d); oral antioxidant vitamins (600 mg vitamin E, 250 mg vitamin C and 20 mg β-carotene daily); both or neither (placebo) | Major vascular event, critical limb ischemia | 2 |
Collins et al. (2002) [26] | Heart Protection Study Collaborative Group | United Kingdom | 20,536 | Patients from 69 hospitals | 40–80 | Coronary disease, other occlusive arterial disease, or diabetes | Antioxidant vitamins (600 mg synthetic vitamin E, 250 mg vitamin C, and 20 mg β-carotene daily) or placebo | Major coronary event, major vascular event | 5 |
Omenn et al. (1996) [27] | Beta-Carotene and Retinol Efficacy Trial (CARET) | United States | 18,314 | Smokers, former smokers, and workers exposed to asbestos | 57–58 | At least 15 years exposure to asbestos, asbestos-related lung disease, or 5-year work in high-risk trades | A combination of 30 mg of β-carotene per day and 25,000 IU of retinol (vitamin A) | CVD death, all-cause death, lung cancer death | 4 |
Goodman et al. (2004) [28] | CARET | United States | 18,140 | As described above | 62 | Postintervention | As described above | CVD death, all-cause death, lung cancer death, other-cause death | 6 |
Blot et al. (1993) [29] | Linxian Study | China | 29,584 | Residents in Linxian communes | 40–69 | No debilitating diseases or prior esophageal or stomach cancer | Retinol and zinc; riboflavin and niacin; vitamin C and molybdenum; β-carotene (15 mg), vitamin E (30 mg), and selenium (50 µg) | Cerebrovascular disease death, cancer death, total death | 5.25 |
Hennekens et al. (1996) [30] | Physicians’ Health Study | United States | 22,071 | Male physicians | 40–84 | No history of cancer (except nonmelanoma skin cancer), myocardial infarction, stroke, or transient cerebral ischemia | Aspirin (325 mg on alternate days) plus β-carotene placebo, β-carotene (50 mg on alternate days) plus aspirin placebo, both active agents, or both placebos | Myocardial infarction, stroke, all important cardiovascular events, malignant neoplasm | 12 |
Greenberg et al. (1996) [31] | Skin Cancer Prevention Study | United Kingdom | 1720 | Treated patients | 63.2 | At least one biopsy-proved basal cell or squamous cell skin cancer treated | 50 mg of β-carotene or placebo | CVD death, cancer death, all death | 8.2 |
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Yang, J.; Zhang, Y.; Na, X.; Zhao, A. β-Carotene Supplementation and Risk of Cardiovascular Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials. Nutrients 2022, 14, 1284. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14061284
Yang J, Zhang Y, Na X, Zhao A. β-Carotene Supplementation and Risk of Cardiovascular Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials. Nutrients. 2022; 14(6):1284. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14061284
Chicago/Turabian StyleYang, Jiaqi, Yulin Zhang, Xiaona Na, and Ai Zhao. 2022. "β-Carotene Supplementation and Risk of Cardiovascular Disease: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials" Nutrients 14, no. 6: 1284. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14061284