Do Vegetarian Diets Provide Adequate Nutrient Intake during Complementary Feeding? A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Why This Systematic Review Is Important
1.2. Objectives
1.3. Key Questions
- Does complementary feeding completely or partially free of animal-source foods in healthy infants result in significantly different auxological development and/or growth compared with that of infants on a balanced omnivorous diet?
- Does complementary feeding completely or partially free of animal-source foods in healthy infants/toddlers result in a psychomotor development that is significantly different from that of infants on a balanced omnivorous diet?
- Do healthy infants on a complementary feeding that is completely or partially free of any animal-based foods
- ◦
- have a different risk of developing NCDs (obesity/overweight, hypertension, diabetes mellitus)?
- ◦
- have a different risk of developing vitamin or other micronutrient deficiencies?
- ◦
- have a different risk of developing infections and related outcomes compared with infants on a balanced omnivorous diet?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design of the Studies Included
- Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and controlled trials (CTs) in which the effect of the caregivers’ feeding practices could be accurately assessed as an experimental intervention.
- Observational studies (cohort studies, longitudinal studies, case-control studies, and cross-sectional studies) in which this effect could be evaluated as an exposure factor while taking into account possible confounding factors.
2.2. Population
2.3. Intervention(s), Exposure(s)
2.4. Comparator(s)/Control
2.5. Inclusion Criteria
- Intervention and observational studies conducted in industrialized countries.
- Studies in which the intervention or exposure was present during the period of complementary feeding (6–24 months).
- Studies comparing vegetarian diets (LOV, vegan, macrobiotic and others, completely free of animal protein) and healthy diets (e.g., MD).
- Studies with follow-up greater than 12 months.
2.6. Exclusion Criteria
- Studies conducted on populations with characteristics different from those established in the PICOs (e.g., children living in LICs (low-income countries), preterm infants, low birth weight infants, children who developed peri-neonatal diseases and children with chronic diseases).
- Non-comparative studies.
- Comparisons between vegetarian and Western-type diets or other non-healthy diets are excluded as wholly inappropriate.
- Studies on so-called dietary patterns in the absence of a precise definition/documentation of what in the individual study was considered a “vegetarian pattern or diet”.
- Follow-up of fewer than 12 months.
- Case reports and case series, despite low quality, have been included in this SR, being a large part of the literature on this topic.
2.7. Outcomes
2.7.1. Main Outcomes
- General growth parameters assessed in prospective differential terms (different increase in weight (W) or length (L) over time) or assessed at a specific time point (with differing frequencies of weights and lengths in the populations being compared: W, L, W/L z-score ratio, body mass index (BMI), BMI z-score (BMIz).
- Risk of wasted and/or stunted growth.
- Risk of impaired neurodevelopment.
- Risk of NCDs (overweight/obesity).
2.7.2. Additional Outcomes
- Risk of deficiency of vitamins and micronutrients.
- Risk of infections.
- Risk of NCDs (T2DM, and hypertension) later in life.
2.8. Keywords and Search Strategy
2.9. Measures of Effect
2.10. Study Selection
2.11. Strategy for Data Synthesis. Additional Analysis of the Results
2.12. Software
3. Results
3.1. Does Complementary Feeding Completely or Partially Free of Animal-Source Foods in Healthy Infants Result in Significantly Different Auxological Development and/or Growth Compared with That of Infants on a Balanced Omnivorous Diet?
3.2. Does Complementary Feeding Completely or Partially Free of Animal-Source Foods in Healthy Infants/Toddlers Result in a Psychomotor Development That Is Significantly Different from That of Infants on a Balanced Omnivorous Diet?
- Gross Motor DevelopmentSitting balance and head control SD = −0.48; p = 0.04.Walking SD = −0.60; p = 0.001.Overall score SD = −0.63; p < 0.001.
- Fine Motor Development SD = −0.13; p = 0.49.
- Language Development SD = −0.42; p = 0.03.
3.3. Do Healthy Infants on a Complementary Feeding That Is Completely or Partially Free of Any Animal-Based Foods
- Have a different risk of developing NCDs (Obesity/Overweight/Hypertension, Diabetes Mellitus)?
- Have a different risk of developing vitamin or other micronutrient deficiencies?
- Have a different risk of developing infections and related outcomes compared to infants on a balanced omnivorous diet?
3.3.1. Risk of Developing NCDs
3.3.2. Risk of Developing Vitamin or Other Micronutrient Deficiencies
3.3.3. Risk of Developing Infections
4. Discussion
4.1. Scientific Evidence on the Safety and Efficacy of Vegetarian Diets in Children and Adolescents
4.1.1. Weight–Length Gain
4.1.2. Psychomotor Development
4.1.3. Risk of NCDs (Obesity/Overweight, Hypertension, Diabetes Mellitus)
4.1.4. Risk of Vitamin or Other Micronutrient Deficiencies
4.1.5. Risk of Infection
4.2. Assessment of Vegetarian Diets: Main Issues
4.2.1. The Definition of a Healthy Diet
4.2.2. The Quality of Scientific Evidence
- Limited numbers of studies specific to some ages, particularly in the CF period.
- Lack of robust, evidence-based GLs where recommendations are not supported by reliable evidence.
- Lack of high-quality comparative studies, even if observational, and lack of RCTs in pediatric age.
- Results too often referred to intakes rather than robust outcomes such as growth and risk of developing conditions (e.g., anemia, overweight/obesity).
- Small samples or outdated cross-sectional studies;
- Unclear differentiation between different types of diets (non-pure VG or VN), as there is often uncertainty on the exposure factors (incorrect definition of “vegetarian diet”, supplementation, diet not strictly followed with occasional consumption of foods of animal origin);
- Studies, more often than not, relying on self-reported data;
- Comparative study with unbalanced omnivorous diets (Western diet) or not precisely defined (generically “omnivorous”), resulting in unclear results that are not transferable to patients with healthy eating habits.
4.2.3. Supplementation: Compliance and Costs
5. Quality of Evidence
- The uncertainty of exposure (self-reported diet), and/or
- The unclear definition of the comparison diet, generically described as “omnivorous”;
- The time of assessment of the outcome, and/or
- The absence of the outcome of interest at the start of the study is not demonstrated.
6. Agreements and Disagreements with Other Studies or Reviews
7. Limitations of the SR and Potential Bias in the Review Process
8. Implications for Research
- A design including the most important confounding factors: any supplements and breast/formula feeding. This will support the reliability of the results obtained, as well as the real impact of the type of diet on relevant outcomes.
- A clear definition of the exposure (in terms of type of diet), which should be limited to the sole period of CF (i.e., 6 months to 2 years of age) and be carefully monitored over time to ensure their real and continuous presence.
- Strict criteria to define which categories of infants and families can be enrolled as control groups; this will avoid similar expositions in subjects pertaining to different groups, as well as differences that might influence the results (e.g., different percentages of breastfed infants between the intervention and control groups).
- An appropriate follow-up period of time, possibly of at least three years, to collect data on predefined outcomes.
- The most limited drop-off possible, even in observational studies.
- A uniform instrumental documentation of specific outcomes, namely the anthropometric ones, that should be collected by qualified health care professionals.
9. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Diet Definition | Food Not Allowed | Food Allowed |
---|---|---|
Pescatarian/pescotarian | Meat (terrestrial animals, birds) | Fish, mollusks, crustaceans, seafood. Any plant-based food: cereals, legumes, vegetables, fruit, algae. Eggs, milk, dairy products, honey, royal jelly §, propolis §, mushrooms, yeasts, lactic ferments and brewer’s yeast |
Lacto-ovo vegetarian | Meat, fish, mollusks | Any plant-based food: cereals, legumes, vegetables, fruit, algae. Eggs, milk, dairy products, honey, royal jelly §, propolis §. Mushrooms, yeasts, lactic ferments and brewer’s yeast |
Lacto-vegetarian | Meat, fish, mollusks, crustaceans, milk and dairy products | Any plant-based food: cereals, legumes, vegetables, fruit, algae. Milk, dairy products, honey, royal jelly §, propolis §. Mushrooms, yeasts, lactic ferments and brewer’s yeast |
Ovo-vegetarian | Meat, fish, mollusks, crustaceans, milk and dairy products | Any plant-based food: cereals, legumes, vegetables, fruit, algae. Eggs, honey, royal jelly §, propolis §. Mushrooms, yeasts, lactic ferments and brewer’s yeast |
Vegan | All foods of animal origin, including: eggs, honey, milk and dairy products, propolis, royal jelly | Any plant-based food: cereals, legumes, vegetables, fruit, algae. Mushrooms, yeasts. |
Raw vegan (vegetarian variant) | All foods heated above 46 °C | Only vegetable foods not heated above 42 °C. Dried vegetable foods allowed. Fruits, vegetables, nuts, seeds, cereals, sprouted legumes. |
Fruitarian | All foods of animal origin including milk and dairy products, eggs; legumes, cereals, vegetables, algae, mushrooms. Fruits and vegetables deriving from roots, flowers and leave and they are not the real fruit of the plant (strawberries, figs…) | Fresh or dry fruits (apple, pear, apricot, peach…), fruit vegetables (tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers…), high-fat fruits (olives, avocados). |
Windfall vegan (vegetarian variant) | All foods that do not fall spontaneously from trees | Seeds or fruits that have fallen naturally from the trees/plants |
[Complementary Feeding Completely or Partially Free of Animal-Source Foods] Compared to [Balanced Omnivorous Diet] for [Different Auxological Development and/or Growth] | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Patient or population: [different auxological development and/or growth] Setting: Primary care Intervention: [complementary feeding completely or partially free of animal-source foods] Comparison: [balanced omnivorous diet] | |||||
Outcomes | № of participants (studies) Follow-up | Certainty of the evidence (GRADE) | Relative effect (95% CI) | Anticipated absolute effects | |
Risk with [balanced omnivorous diet] | * Risk difference with [complementary feeding completely or partially free of animal-source foods] | ||||
Risk of wasted grow thassessed with: % infant with major skin and muscle wasting follow-up: 2 years | 106 (1 observational study) [42] | ⨁⨁⨁◯ Moderate a,b,c | RR 17.45 (2.39 to 127.38) | 18 per 1000 | 289 more per 1000 (24 more to 2217 more) |
Risk of stunted or wasted growth assessed with: % children with stunted growth | 430 (1 observational study) [43] | ⨁⨁⨁◯ Moderate c,d | OR 13.97 (1.86 to 104.88) | 6 per 1000 | 73 more per 1000 (5 more to 385 more) |
[Complementary Feeding Completely or Partially Free of Animal-Source Foods] Compared to [Balanced Omnivorous Diet] for [Psychomotor Development That Is Significantly Different] | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Patient or population: [psychomotor development that is significantly different] Setting: Primary care Intervention: [complementary feeding completely or partially free of animal-source foods] Comparison: [balanced omnivorous diet] | |||||
Outcomes | № of participants (studies) Follow-up | Certainty of the evidence (GRADE) | Relative effect (95% CI) | Anticipated absolute effects | |
Risk with [balanced omnivorous diet] | * Risk difference with [complementary feeding completely or partially free of animal-source foods] | ||||
Psychomotor development assessed with: standardized psychomotor checklist (score) | 106 (1 observational study) [42] | ⨁⨁◯◯ Low a,b | - | The mean psychomotor development was 0 | −0.63 0 (0 to 0) |
Psychomotor development assessed with: case report e case series | (7 observational studies) [43] | ⨁⨁⨁◯ Moderate c | 10 cases of children aged 8–18 months: all of them exhibit severe neurological outcomes and growth deficits resulting from low vitamin B12 and vitamin D levels, with anemia, stunting, brain abnormalities, and demyelination. Cases with persistent outcomes are reported with no long-term follow-up data for any other disorders. |
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Simeone, G.; Bergamini, M.; Verga, M.C.; Cuomo, B.; D’Antonio, G.; Iacono, I.D.; Mauro, D.D.; Mauro, F.D.; Mauro, G.D.; Leonardi, L.; et al. Do Vegetarian Diets Provide Adequate Nutrient Intake during Complementary Feeding? A Systematic Review. Nutrients 2022, 14, 3591. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14173591
Simeone G, Bergamini M, Verga MC, Cuomo B, D’Antonio G, Iacono ID, Mauro DD, Mauro FD, Mauro GD, Leonardi L, et al. Do Vegetarian Diets Provide Adequate Nutrient Intake during Complementary Feeding? A Systematic Review. Nutrients. 2022; 14(17):3591. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14173591
Chicago/Turabian StyleSimeone, Giovanni, Marcello Bergamini, Maria Carmen Verga, Barbara Cuomo, Giuseppe D’Antonio, Iride Dello Iacono, Dora Di Mauro, Francesco Di Mauro, Giuseppe Di Mauro, Lucia Leonardi, and et al. 2022. "Do Vegetarian Diets Provide Adequate Nutrient Intake during Complementary Feeding? A Systematic Review" Nutrients 14, no. 17: 3591. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14173591
APA StyleSimeone, G., Bergamini, M., Verga, M. C., Cuomo, B., D’Antonio, G., Iacono, I. D., Mauro, D. D., Mauro, F. D., Mauro, G. D., Leonardi, L., Miniello, V. L., Palma, F., Scotese, I., Tezza, G., Vania, A., & Caroli, M. (2022). Do Vegetarian Diets Provide Adequate Nutrient Intake during Complementary Feeding? A Systematic Review. Nutrients, 14(17), 3591. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu14173591