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Efficacy of n-3 fatty acid supplementation on rheumatoid arthritis' disease activity indicators: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized placebo-controlled trials.

Konstantinos Gkiouras, Maria G Grammatikopoulou, Ioannis Myrogiannis, Theodora Papamitsou, Eirini I Rigopoulou et al.
Meta-Analysis Critical reviews in food science and nutrition 2024 25 citations
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

Type d'étude
Meta-Analysis
Population
Rheumatoid arthritis patients (23 RCTs)
Intervention
Efficacy of n-3 fatty acid supplementation on rheumatoid arthritis' disease activity indicators: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized placebo-controlled trials. None
Comparateur
Placebo
Critère de jugement principal
RA disease activity indicators (pain, joint count)
Direction de l'effet
Neutral
Risque de biais
High

Abstract

Theoretical evidence and previous studies suggest that oralnutrient supplementation (ONS) with n-3 fatty acids for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) has the potential to lower disease activity indicators and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) uptake. A systematic search was conducted on five databases/registries from inception until May 23, 2021 with the aim to identify randomized placebo-controlled trials comparing n-3 supplements to placebo on disease-specific outcomes. A total of 23 studies matched the criteria (PROSPERO: CRD42019137041). Pooled analyses revealed that n-3 ONS provided a small effect in reducing pain [standardized mean difference (SMD): -0.16, 95% confidence intervals (CI): -0.40 to 0.09], and tender (SMD: -0.20, 95% CI: -0.46 to 0.05) and swollen joint count (SMD: -0.10, 95% CI: -0.28 to 0.07). In sensitivity analyses, there was a small effect in the reduction of NSAIDs intake (SMD: -0.22, 95% CI: -0.90 to 0.46), and c-reactive protein was reduced only by 0.21 mg/dL (95% CI: -0.75 to 0.33). Similar findings were observed regarding other objective/subjective outcomes. The certainty of the evidence was mostly of "very low/low" quality. Overall, n-3 ONS in RA might have a limited clinical benefit. Previous findings suggesting a reduction in NSAID intake may have been biased from the inadequate blinding of interventions.

En bref

Overall, n-3 ONS in RA might have a limited clinical benefit and the certainty of the evidence was mostly of “very low/low” quality.

Used In Evidence Reviews

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