6533b830fe1ef96bd1297307
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Dairy foods and health: an umbrella review of observational studies
Justyna GodosDaniele Del RioAngelo GamberaSumantra RaySilvio BuscemiStefano MarventanoLucilla TittaSalvatore SciaccaAlessandra LafranconiAlessandra LafranconiGiuseppe GrossoFabio GalvanoFrancesca GhelfiMaria TieriElena Alonzosubject
0301 basic medicineMILK CONSUMPTIONPROSTATE-CANCER RISKHealth Status030209 endocrinology & metabolismDiseaseOVARIAN-CANCERmeta-analysiCOLORECTAL-CANCERcheeseyogurt03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineBreast cancerMeta-Analysis as TopicEnvironmental healthDiabetes mellitusBREAST-CANCERMedicineHumansSettore MED/49 - Scienze Tecniche Dietetiche ApplicateVITAMIN-DTRANS-PALMITOLEIC ACIDmilk030109 nutrition & dieteticsumbrella reviewevidencebusiness.industryConfoundingCARDIOVASCULAR-DISEASE RISKcohortEvidence-based medicineprospectivemedicine.diseasebutter; cheese; cohort; Dairy products; evidence; meta-analysis; milk; prospective; umbrella review; yogurtmeta-analysisbutterDairy productObservational Studies as TopicPRODUCTS CONSUMPTIONMeta-analysisObservational studyDOSE-RESPONSE METAANALYSISDairy ProductsMetabolic syndromebusinessFood Sciencedescription
Evidence on consumption of dairy foods and human health is contradictory. This study aimed to summarize the level of evidence of dairy consumption on various health outcomes. A systematic search for meta-analyses was performed: study design, dose–response relationship, heterogeneity and agreement of results over time, and identification of potential confounding factors were considered to assess the level of evidence. Convincing and probable evidence of decreased risk of colorectal cancer, hypertension and cardiovascular disease, elevated blood pressure and fatal stroke, respectively, was found for total dairy consumption; possible decreased risk of breast cancer, metabolic syndrome, stroke and type-2 diabetes, and increased risk of prostate cancer and Parkinson’s disease was also found. Similar, yet not entirely consistent evidence for individual dairy products was reported. Among potential confounding factors, geographical localisation and fat content of dairy have been detected. In conclusions, dairy may be part of a healthy diet; however, additional studies exploring confounding factors are needed to ascertain the potential detrimental effects.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-06-14 |