Health effects associated with vegetable consumption: a Burden of Proof study

Author:

Stanaway Jeffrey D.ORCID,Afshin Ashkan,Ashbaugh Charlie,Bisignano Catherine,Brauer Michael,Ferrara Giannina,Garcia Vanessa,Haile DemewozORCID,Hay Simon I.ORCID,He Jiawei,Iannucci Vincent,Lescinsky Haley,Mullany Erin C.,Parent Marie C.ORCID,Serfes Audrey L.,Sorensen Reed J. D.,Aravkin Aleksandr Y.,Zheng Peng,Murray Christopher J. L.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractPrevious research suggests a protective effect of vegetable consumption against chronic disease, but the quality of evidence underlying those findings remains uncertain. We applied a Bayesian meta-regression tool to estimate the mean risk function and quantify the quality of evidence for associations between vegetable consumption and ischemic heart disease (IHD), ischemic stroke, hemorrhagic stroke, type 2 diabetes and esophageal cancer. Increasing from no vegetable consumption to the theoretical minimum risk exposure level (306–372 g daily) was associated with a 23.2% decline (95% uncertainty interval, including between-study heterogeneity: 16.4–29.4) in ischemic stroke risk; a 22.9% (13.6–31.3) decline in IHD risk; a 15.9% (1.7–28.1) decline in hemorrhagic stroke risk; a 28.5% (−0.02–51.4) decline in esophageal cancer risk; and a 26.1% (−3.6–48.3) decline in type 2 diabetes risk. We found statistically significant protective effects of vegetable consumption for ischemic stroke (three stars), IHD (two stars), hemorrhagic stroke (two stars) and esophageal cancer (two stars). Including between-study heterogeneity, we did not detect a significant association with type 2 diabetes, corresponding to a one-star rating. Although current evidence supports increased efforts and policies to promote vegetable consumption, remaining uncertainties suggest the need for continued research.

Funder

Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Bloomberg Family Foundation

University of Melbourne

Department of Health, Queensland

Department of Health | National Health and Medical Research Council

Public Health England

St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital

the Norwegian Institute of Public Health; the Cardiovascular Medical Research and Education Fund; the National Institute on Ageing of the NIH

The funders for this study are listed in full under Jeffrey Stanaway.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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