Effects of Oat Beta-Glucan Intake on Lipid Profiles in Hypercholesterolemic Adults: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomized Controlled Trials.

Nutrients. 2022;14(10)
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Plain language summary

Dyslipidaemia is one of the risk factors associated with cardiovascular disease. Beta-glucan is a viscous soluble fibre found in microalgae, fungi and grains like oats, barley, sorghum etc. This systematic review and meta-analysis included thirteen randomised controlled trials to evaluate the effectiveness of oat beta-glucans on the lipid profiles of patients with hypercholesterolemia. This research showed a significant reduction in total cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein levels in hypercholesterolemic adults after beta-glucan intake. However, beta-glucans did not impact triglyceride and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol. Beta-glucan's effect on lipid profiles depended on the severity of hypercholesterolemia, the duration of the intervention, the source of beta-glucan, and the dosage of beta-glucan. Healthcare professionals can use the results of this study to understand the lipid profile-improving effects of beta-glucans in adults with moderate hypercholesterolemia. However, further robust studies are required to evaluate the effects of beta-glucan on lipid profiles and how the effect is affected by gender differences.

Expert Review


Conflicts of interest: None

Take Home Message:
  • Consumption of oat beta glucans may be beneficial for improving total cholesterol and LDL-c in people with mild and moderate hypercholesterolemia
  • The U.S Food and Drug Administration (FDA) recommends 3g or more of oat beta glucans per day to reap the benefits. This could be from 90g of oats (3 x 30g portions) or 1 30g portion of oats, 3 oatcakes and 1-2 tbsp of oat bran.

Evidence Category:
  • X A: Meta-analyses, position-stands, randomized-controlled trials (RCTs)
  • B: Systematic reviews including RCTs of limited number
  • C: Non-randomized trials, observational studies, narrative reviews
  • D: Case-reports, evidence-based clinical findings
  • E: Opinion piece, other

Summary Review:
Authors highlight that Hypercholesterolemia is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease and a symptom of Metabolic Syndrome. Hypercholesterolemia commonly includes; elevated levels of total cholesterol and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-c) and lower levels of high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-c).

Conventional medical treatment for hypercholesterolemia is statins, however, statins can have a number of adverse side effects. For this reason, dietary interventions have been investigated including the use of oat beta-glucans for their potential lipid lowering effects.

The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to synthesise and evaluate the evidence for the effects of oat beta-glucans on serum cholesterol and triglyceride (TG) levels in adults with hypercholesterolemia.

Thirteen randomised controlled trials (RCTs) published between 1999 – 2021 met the study inclusion criteria. These studies included a total population of 927 people aged between 38-76 years and from 7 different countries worldwide. The majority of participants were diagnosed with mild hypercholesterolemia.

Participants were randomised into an intervention group receiving dietary sources of oat beta-glucans or food with added oat beta-glucans or a placebo control group consisting of diets without beta-glucans.

Study lengths ranged from 3 to 8 weeks with doses of oat beta-glucans between 1.5g to 6g. The studies were also broken down into sub-groups for high and low doses of oat beta-glucan and mild and moderate hypercholesterolemia.

Baseline and endpoint cholesterol (total cholesterol C, HD-c & LDL-c) and triglycerides were used to assess the effectiveness of the interventions and a weighted mean difference (WMD) calculated with a 95% confidence interval (CI).

Key Findings:

  • a reduction in total cholesterol (WMD = -0.24mmol/L; 95% CI)
  • a reduction in LDL-c (WMD = -0.27mmol/L; 95% CI )
  • Sub-groups found that oat beta-glucans reduced serum TG levels in patients with moderate hypercholesterolemia (WMD = -0.11 mmol/L; 95% CI) but not in cases of mild hypercholesterolemia. (WMD = -0.01 mmol/L; 95% CI)
  • Higher daily doses of oat beta glucans had more positive effects on TG levels, however the results were not statistically significant in this meta-analysis
  • <3g WMD -0.11 mmol/L; 95% CI: -0.13 to -0.08 mmol/L
  • >3g WMD -0.00 mmol/L; 95% CI: -0.16 to -0.16 mmol/L
  • Greater reductions in HDL -c were found in patients with moderate hypercholesterolemia (WMD-0.06 mmol/L; 95% CI; -0.07 to -0.05 mmol/L) compared to mild cases (WMD-0.01 mmol/L; 95% CI; -0.08 to -0.10 mmol/L).

Conclusion

Dietary intake of oat beta-glucans may support the reduction of total cholesterol and low density lipoprotein cholesterol, however, no significant changes were found for high density lipoprotein cholesterol or serum triglycerides. Due to the heterogeneity between studies and inconsistencies in results, more trials are needed with larger sample sizes and longer durations.

Notes: The authors reported no conflicts of interest.

Clinical practice applications:
Based on the pooled results of this meta-analysis:

  • 1.5g -6g of dietary intake of oat beta-glucans could support a reduction of TC and LDL-c in cases of mild and moderate hypercholesterolemia
  • Intake of oat beta glucans >3g may reduce TG levels
  • HDl -c may be improved with oat beta glucan intake of between 1.5g to 6g for clients with moderate hypercholesterolemia.

Considerations for future research:
The findings of 8 of the 13 RCTs indicated that when compared to the control group, LDL-c could be lowered by oat beta-glucans whilst the other 5 trials did not. However, the cumulative results of this meta analysis found a reduction in LDL-c.

There were also several limitations to this study:

  • Heterogeneity between studies and inconsistent results
  • Short study duration
  • Small populations and limited sample size
  • The results varied for different levels of hypercholesterolemia
  • Results may also differ by sex and source of oat beta glucans

Larger and longer trials are therefore needed to confirm the results.

Abstract

(1) Background: hyperlipidemia is one of the cardiovascular diseases which becomes a great threat to the health of people worldwide. Oat beta-glucan is reported to have a beneficial effect on lowering blood lipids. To probe the effect of oat beta-glucan consumption on serum lipid profiles (total cholesterol, total triglyceride, high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol, and low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol), we carried out a systematic search on randomized controlled trials of oat beta-glucan intervention on hypercholesterolemic individuals. (2) Methods: the pieces of literature were obtained from PubMed, Scopus, Cochrane Library, Web of Science, and the Embase from inception to 28 February 2022. The results were presented with the weighted mean difference (WMD) with a 95% CI. The random-effects or fixed-effects model was applied according to the heterogeneity. The subgroup analysis and meta-regression were used to identify the source of heterogeneity. (3) Results: thirteen trials with 927 participants were included in our meta-analysis. Overall, oat beta-glucan supplementation significantly reduced levels of TC (pooled WMD = -0.24 mmol/L; 95%CI: -0.28 to -0.20 mmol/L), LDL-c (pooled WMD = -0.27 mmol/L; 95%CI: -0.35 to -0.20 mmol/L). Furthermore, beta-glucan consumption did not show significant effects on TG (pooled WMD = -0.04 mmol/L; 95%CI: -0.13 to 0.05 mmol/L), HDL-c (pooled WMD = 0.00 mmol/L; 95%CI: -0.05 to 0.05 mmol/L). Subgroup analysis indicated that critical factors, such as disease severity of participants, the daily intervention of oat beta-glucan, source of oat beta-glucan, and duration of intervention had impacts on outcomes. (4) Conclusions: oat beta-glucan intake may significantly decrease the level of TC and LDL-c while no significant changes in TG and HDL-c were observed. This meta-analysis supports the health benefits of oat beta-glucan, especially for its cholesterol-lowering features, although it has some inevitable limitations.

Lifestyle medicine

Fundamental Clinical Imbalances : Structural
Patient Centred Factors : Mediators/Oat beta-glucan
Environmental Inputs : Diet ; Nutrients
Personal Lifestyle Factors : Nutrition
Functional Laboratory Testing : Blood
Bioactive Substances : Oat beta-glucan

Methodological quality

Jadad score : Not applicable
Allocation concealment : Not applicable

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