Description:
Despite positive associations between micronutrient intake, status, and health outcomes,
many randomized controlled trials (RCT) of vitamins are null. Standards to establish causality in
biological systems include the Bradford Hill criteria, the experimental component of which relies
on and promotes RCT-centred approaches. Such criteria may need adaptations to the specificities
of nutrition science. Our objective, as part of a broader FENS initiative to improve the science of
nutrition, was to conduct a case study to assess the Bradford Hill criteria (BHC) applied to clinical
studies of vitamin D and cardiovascular disease endpoints and evaluate strengths and pitfalls for
this approach. We conducted a systematic review of the recent literature on CVD and vitamin D
supplementation, including both RCT, cohort studies (CT), or systematic reviews within Medline,
Web of Science, and Cochrane libraries. Studies had to be conducted in adults, including hard
CVD-relevant endpoints with a minimum sample size of n = 500 for RCT and n = 10,000 for CT.
CThadtoutilize quality-assured, analytical methods for serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D assessment
and include verified clinical outcomes. We also evaluated and proposed plausible biochemical and
physiological mechanisms for vitamin D and CVD. We graded the evidence according to BHC for the establishment of causality in biological systems and the identification of strengths and pitfalls of this
approach. The search yielded 4170 papers, and 31 met the predefined criteria. The criteria “strength
of association”, “consistency”, “temporality”, “biological gradient”, “plausibility”, “experiment”,
“specificity”, “analogy”, and “coherence” were analyzed and appraised. While the logical framework
of the BHC is perceived as useful, its direct applicability to the nutritional context is partly open to
interpretation and could be further specified. The Bradford Hill criteria for establishing causality
need adaptation for the nutritional context and to the advances in biological and social sciences in the
last decades. Insights gained and methodological paradigms identified may have broad application
to nutrition science
URL:
http://103.158.96.210:88/web_repository/uploads/proceedings-91-00137.pdf
Type:
Procceding
Document:
Diploma III Farmasi
Date:
23-06-2024
Author:
Diego Moretti