Harris et al. (Reference Harris, Brouwer and Mozaffarian1) apparently overlooked the central finding of our analysis(Reference Ramsden, Hibbeln and Majchrzak2), that n-6 specific PUFA interventions and mixed n-3/n-6 PUFA interventions have significantly different effects on risk of non-fatal myocardial infarction (MI) and CHD death in heterogeneity analysis (P = 0·02). Given this clear statistical distinction, it is not valid to assess these two heterogeneous interventions together as a single unit(Reference Matt, Cook, Cooper and Hedges3). This key finding of heterogeneity calls into question the validity of interpreting results of any pooled analysis of the effects of mixtures of n-3 and n-6 PUFA to support advice specific to n-6 PUFA. Yet Harris et al. have repeatedly cited(Reference Harris, Mozaffarian and Rimm4–Reference Mozaffarian, Micha and Wallace8) three such pooled analyses, that did not make this essential distinction, as the primary evidence base for American Heart Association (AHA) advice to maintain or increase intake of n-6 PUFA: (1) the meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials (RCT) and CHD outcomes by Mozaffarian et al. (Reference Mozaffarian, Micha and Wallace8); (2) the analysis of prospective observational cohorts by Jakobsen et al. (Reference Jakobsen, O'Reilly and Heitmann9); and (3) the analysis of intermediate risk factors by Mensink et al. (Reference Mensink, Zock and Kester10). Each of these analyses evaluated the effects of increasing n-3 and n-6 PUFA together (Tables 1 and 2), without specificity for n-6 linoleic acid (LA), as we recently reviewed in detail(Reference Ramsden, Hibbeln and Majchrzak11). In relying on these non-specific PUFA data, rather than data selective to n-6 LA, Harris et al. (Reference Harris, Brouwer and Mozaffarian1) and the AHA Advisory Group were willing to assume that the modest but ‘remarkably consistent’ CHD benefits were attributable to n-6 LA, rather than to n-3 EPA+DHA and/or α-linolenic acid (ALA). We were unwilling to make this assumption without valid data evaluating the effects of selectively increasing LA.
RCT, randomised controlled trial; MI, myocardial infarction; ALA, α-linolenic acid.
* None of these pooled analyses evaluated the specific effects of n-6 LA or n-6 PUFA; however, their concordant benefits have been attributed to n-6 LA.
† Mixed n-3/n-6 PUFA indicates RCT interventions that substantially increased both n-3 and n-6 PUFA, or exposure variables in observational cohorts that included both n-3 and n-6 PUFA.
‡ n-6 Specific PUFA indicates RCT interventions that increased n-6 LA without substantially increasing n-3 PUFA.
§ Individual prospective cohorts included in the pooled analysis by Jakobsen et al. have limited ability to disentangle the respective intakes of n-3 ALA and n-6 LA, particularly for foods eaten away from home and packaged foods(Reference Ramsden, Hibbeln and Majchrzak11) (see Table 2).
* Harris et al. (Reference Harris, Brouwer and Mozaffarian1) cited the 20-year follow-up of the NHS(Reference Oh, Hu and Manson29), which reported a protective association between dietary n-6 LA and CHD risk as evidence for CHD benefits of LA. However, the FFQ used in the NHS have limited ability to disentangle the respective intakes of n-3 ALA and n-6 LA, especially in packaged food items and in the approximately 40 % of PUFA eaten away from home(21), as recently reviewed(Reference Ramsden, Hibbeln and Majchrzak11). The exact methodology used to estimate the absolute and relative intakes of ALA and LA from these limited FFQ data has not been published.
† The sixty-one-item 1980 NHS FFQ that provided baseline data for the report that dietary n-6 LA is associated with lower CHD risk(Reference Oh, Hu and Manson29) did not identify any specific oils or brand names of any food items.
‡ The revised 116-item 1984 NHS FFQ providing baseline data for the report that dietary ALA is associated with lower risk of fatal CHD(Reference Hu, Stampfer and Manson30) did not capture specific brand names for any of the three reported primary sources of ALA (mayonnaise, oil and vinegar salad dressing, and margarine).
§ The revised 131-item 1986 FFQ, which did not capture brand names or specific oils used in shortenings, mayonnaises, salad dressings, or packaged foods, was used thereafter.
∥ Indicates a general question about fat sources (for example, real butter, margarine, vegetable oil, vegetable shortening, lard), without the identification of specific brand names or specific vegetable oils in ingredient lists.
¶ The 1998 revision is the first FFQ listing olive oil as an option for the fat ‘usually used’ for cooking at home.
Our meta-analysis of four n-6 specific PUFA RCT datasets with 9569 participants(Reference Ramsden, Hibbeln and Majchrzak2) is therefore unique because it is the first analysis to compile the detailed dietary fatty acid data necessary to evaluate the CHD effects of selectively increasing n-6 LA (in place of trans-fatty acids and SFA). These n-6 specific PUFA data, which were not available to Mozaffarian et al. (Reference Mozaffarian, Micha and Wallace8), were obtained via an extensive search of published and unpublished data sources enabling identification of the specific study oils and n-3 and n-6 PUFA content of RCT diets. Of the total RCT participants (n 11 275), 85 % were in the n-6 specific PUFA RCT (n 9569); therefore only 15 % of all RCT participants (n 1706) were in the mixed n-3/n-6 PUFA RCT. Harris et al. (Reference Harris, Brouwer and Mozaffarian1) seem preoccupied with the results of the latter 15 % of RCT participants, which they interpret as ‘confirming’ that ‘vegetable oils rich in n-6 PUFA’ lower CHD(Reference Harris, Brouwer and Mozaffarian1). However, they apparently dismiss our pivotal finding that there was no indication of benefit in any of the four n-6 specific PUFA datasets representing 85 % of the total RCT participants.
There was a non-significant, but relatively consistent, signal toward harm in each of these four n-6 specific PUFA datasets (Figs. 1 and 2), as well as a pooled analysis for both CHD outcomes and death from all causes, despite substitution of n-6 LA for trans-fatty acids and SFA, which are generally considered atherogenic. By highlighting only the two n-6 specific PUFA RCT (three datasets) that provided corn oil(Reference Frantz, Dawson and Ashman12, Reference Frantz and Keys13), and ignoring the unfavourable results of the fourth n-6 specific PUFA RCT dataset that provided safflower-seed oil(Reference Woodhill, Palmer and Leelarthaepin14, Reference Woodhill, Palmer and Blacket15), Harris et al. have inaccurately portrayed our n-6 specific PUFA evaluation of four datasets and 9569 participants as a ‘two-trial analysis’ with ‘limited statistical power’ useful for ‘hypothesis generation but insufficient for deriving meaningful conclusions’. This fourth dataset, the Sydney Diet Heart Study (SDHS)(Reference Woodhill, Palmer and Leelarthaepin14), reported a 49 % increase in risk of death in the n-6 specific intervention group that approached significance (risk ratio (RR) 1·49 (95 % CI 0·95, 2·34); P = 0·08). Nearly all SDHS deaths were attributed to CHD (91 %); however, non-fatal MI and CHD death were not reported by group. Using reported SDHS data, the lowest possible increase in CHD death in the SDHS was +26 % (RR 1·26 (95 % CI 0·79, 2·02); P = 0·33); the highest possible increase was +90 % (RR 1·90 (95 % CI 1·17, 3·10); P = 0·01). Therefore, the 13 % increase in CHD risk from only three of the four n-6 specific PUFA interventions underestimates potential harm. In modelling the equitable assumption that the same percentage of SDHS deaths (91 %) were CHD deaths in each group, the risk of CHD death was increased by 49 % (RR 1·49 (95 % CI 0·93, 2·40); P = 0·10), and the pooled 28 % increase in risk of CHD death from n-6 specific PUFA interventions was nearly significant (RR 1·28 (95 % CI 0·96, 1·71); P = 0·09). Pooled data from all four n-6 specific PUFA datasets (n 9569; 85 % of all RCT participants) provide a relatively consistent, albeit non-significant, trend toward increased risks for CHD death (+28 %) (RR 1·28 (95 % CI 0·96, 1·71); P = 0·09), total CHD events (+23 %) (RR 1·23 (95 % CI 0·94, 1·61); P = 0·13), and death from all causes (+16 %) (RR 1·16 (95 % CI 0·95, 1·42); P = 0·15). With no indication of benefit in any n-6 specific PUFA RCT or the pooled analysis of all four datasets, and a relatively consistent signal in the opposite direction for each dataset and for the pooled analysis, these data provide no justification for population-wide advice to maintain or increase n-6 PUFA consumption.
Harris et al. (Reference Harris, Brouwer and Mozaffarian1) have not fully appreciated the essential distinction between n-3 and n-6 PUFA species in attributing benefits from our pooled analysis of mixed n-3/n-6 PUFA RCT datasets to ‘vegetable oils rich in n-6 PUFA’ or simply ‘soybean oil’, despite substantial increases in n-3 EPA+DHA in two(Reference Leren16–Reference Watts, Jackson and Mandalia18) of the four datasets. The experimental dieters in the Oslo Diet Heart Study (ODHS) were actually provided with ‘substantial quantities of Norwegian sardines canned in cod liver oil’(Reference Leren16) and not simply ‘encouraged’ as Harris et al. state here(Reference Harris, Brouwer and Mozaffarian1) and elsewhere(Reference Harris, Mozaffarian and Rimm4, Reference Ramsden, Hibbeln and Lands19, Reference Ramsden20). Oslo dieters consumed about 5 g EPA+DHA per d (thirty times the average US intake)(21); therefore it is not valid to attribute CHD benefits to LA or soybean oil. After exclusion of the ODHS and the St Thomas Atherosclerosis Regression Study (STARS), the remaining two datasets(22–Reference Dayton and Pearce24) that substantially increased both n-3 ALA and n-6 LA from soybean oil without increasing n-3 EPA+DHA have a non-significant signal toward benefit, and lack the signal toward harm of the n-6 specific PUFA interventions.
The structure of all RCT data is shown in Fig. 1 and Fig. 2, as follows: (A) mixed n-3/n-6 interventions including EPA+DHA are beneficial; (B) mixed n-3/n-6 interventions including ALA provide an intermediate signal toward benefit; and (C) interventions specific to n-6 LA provide no indication of benefit and a relatively consistent signal toward harm. Given this consistent pattern for CHD deaths and total CHD events (Fig. 1), and for deaths from all causes (Fig. 2), it is tempting to speculate that CHD benefits previously attributed to n-6 PUFA or total PUFA in general(Reference Harris, Mozaffarian and Rimm4, Reference Kris-Etherton and Harris6–Reference Mozaffarian, Micha and Wallace8, Reference Katan25) were actually due to substantial increases in n-3 PUFA in general, and n-3 EPA+DHA in particular, and that the accompanying increases in n-6 LA attenuated these benefits. If this testable hypothesis is correct, lowering dietary n-6 LA is likely to potentiate the benefits of n-3 PUFA and/or have independent CHD benefits. However, we have no RCT data evaluating the effects of lowering n-6 LA as a controlled variable on clinical CHD outcomes. This is clearly a critical evidence gap with major public health implications. The next logical step is to evaluate whether lowering dietary n-6 LA as a controlled variable to about 2 % of energy (consistent with evolutionary(Reference Kuipers, Luxwolda and Dijck-Brouwer26) and historical US diets(Reference Blasbalg, Hibbeln and Ramsden27)) reduces the risk of CHD in a large RCT. This can be accomplished via substitution of a high-oleic version of sunflower-seed oil (3·6 g LA per 100 g)(28) for a typical high-LA version of the same oil (65·7 g LA per 100 g)(28) with otherwise identical background diets.
This project was supported by the intramural research program of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism. Its contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism or the National Institutes of Health.
Acknowledgements
The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.