The dietary intake of soya proteins in experimental animals, as well as in humans, may lead to significant reductions in plasma cholesterol level. A number of studies, starting from those of our group in the 1970s on human subjects (Sirtori et al. Reference Sirtori, Agradi, Conti, Mantero and Gatti1977, Reference Sirtori, Gatti, Mantero, Conti, Agradi, Tremoli, Sirtori, Fraterrigo, Tavazzi and Kritchevsky1979; Descovich et al. Reference Descovich, Ceredi and Gaddi1980), and from those of Carroll's group on animals (Carroll, Reference Carroll1982), had pointed out that the substitution of animal proteins with vegetable proteins, mainly from soya, was associated with a hypocholesterolaemic response.
These initial studies clearly indicated that the hypocholesterolaemic activity of soya proteins, given as a total protein substitution, was detected mainly in severely hypercholesterolaemic individuals. This activity is of a lesser degree, and frequently absent, in individuals with total and LDL-cholesterol levels below 240 and 150 mg/dl, respectively (Sirtori et al. Reference Sirtori, Gatti, Mantero, Conti, Agradi, Tremoli, Sirtori, Fraterrigo, Tavazzi and Kritchevsky1979; Gaddi et al. Reference Gaddi, Ciarrocchi, Matteucci, Rimondi, Ravaglia, Descovich and Sirtori1991). These early studies, also in subjects of childhood age (Gaddi et al. Reference Gaddi, Descovich, Noseda, Fragiacomo, Nicolini, Montanari, Vanetti, Sirtori, Gatti and Sirtori1987), provided an extreme dietary approach, although one accepted by patients who were not at that time offered effective cholesterol-lowering medications. Even though resin therapy (Levy et al. Reference Levy, Fredrickson and Stone1973), and in specific cases LDL apheresis (Franceschini et al. Reference Franceschini, Busnach, Vaccarino, Calabresi, Gianfranceschi and Sirtori1988), could achieve biochemical results not too different from those obtained today with statins, personal and organizational complexities did not allow a wider use of these alternative procedures.
In more recent years, the availability of effective medications and the improved organolectic features of soya protein-based food items suggested that these could be given as partial substitutes in the daily diet, eventually attempting to improve the response to medication. Evaluation of the findings from a large number of studies on soya proteins, carried out up to 1995, was provided by a widely quoted meta-analysis (Anderson et al. Reference Anderson, Johnstone and Cook-Newell1995). This investigated thirty-eight papers evaluating cholesterol changes following soya protein intake, twenty-nine of which were used for the final analysis, for a total of thirty-one studies. A variety of approaches and patient characteristics were considered, ranging from studies with a complete substitution of soya in the diet to studies with just additions, from studies in severely hypercholesterolaemic patients to studies in those with a normal range of cholesterol level.
The mean change in plasma total cholesterol was − 23·2 mg/dl ( − 9·3 %) and that in LDL-cholesterol–21·7 mg/dl ( − 12·9 %). The reduction in cholesterol level, however, appeared to be strongly dependent upon the baseline cholesterol. In particular, subjects with cholesterol values below 200 mg/dl showed essentially no reduction, whereas more significant changes were noted with high starting cholesterolaemias. A regression model predicting net changes in serum cholesterol concentration as a function of the characteristics of the studies (see Table 3 in Anderson et al.'s meta-analysis) showed that 77·3 % of the variance between studies was explained by the square value of the initial plasma cholesterol level, whereas other characteristics, such as type of soya protein, amount of soya protein per day, type of diet and age of the subjects, provided much smaller or negligible contributions.
This 10-year-old meta-analysis was recently criticised on the grounds that some more recent studies, again encompassing individuals with a variety of cholesterol levels and different durations and types of product, failed clearly to indicate a sizable cholesterol reduction following soya protein-based diets (Sacks et al. Reference Sacks, Lichtenstein, Van Horn, Harris, Kris-Etherton and Winston2006). A major criticism was also that, in the Anderson meta-analysis, the authors put great emphasis on the presence of phytoestrogens in the soya products as a possible hypocholesterolaemic mechanism. Interestingly, no phytoestrogens were present in the initial studies on soya proteins in severely hypercholesterolaemic patients (Sirtori et al. Reference Sirtori, Gianazza, Manzoni, Lovati and Murphy1997), and most of the studies from this group used soya products without phytoestrogens. In addition, the possibility that phytoestrogens may play a real role in cholesterol reduction caused by soya has recently been ruled out (Sirtori et al. Reference Sirtori, Arnoldi and Johnson2005; Hall et al. Reference Hall, Vafeiadou and Hallund2006).
It thus seemed of value to assess whether or not a nomogram prepared from the data of the Anderson meta-analysis, i.e. a predictive model based on the final results of the thirty-one studies, could still be used in order to predict changes in cholesterolaemia in later studies. Some studies in the meta-analysis involved total substitutions, others just a partial substitution of soya proteins, but the overall results still seemed to be relatively independent of these variables.
Materials and methods
Selection of the studies
Studies on soya proteins and serum cholesterol were searched using MEDLINE and also using published material, in particular the recent American Heart Association Science Advisory on Soy Proteins (Sacks et al. Reference Sacks, Lichtenstein, Van Horn, Harris, Kris-Etherton and Winston2006). A selection was made from all studies published after 1995, using the following criteria: a well-defined study with clear definitions of total and LDL-cholesterol levels, and a duration of at least 3 weeks, in order to allow meaningful changes of cholesterol over time (Keys, Reference Keys1967).
A total of twenty-seven papers examined the effect of soya proteins on cholesterolaemia after the Anderson meta-analysis and satisfied our selected criteria. Of these, twenty-three papers were examined in the review article by the American Heart Association Science Advisory (Sacks et al. Reference Sacks, Lichtenstein, Van Horn, Harris, Kris-Etherton and Winston2006). Among the papers considered in that review, one was excluded because it was based on a mixed diet including both soya and oats (van Horn et al. 2001) and one because changes were presented only in very small, unreadable graphs (Dent et al. Reference Dent, Peterson, Brace, Swain, Reddy, Hanson, Robinson and Alekel2001).
Conversely, we included a paper (not considered in the American Heart Association Science Advisory) by our group on severely hypercholesterolaemic patients poorly responsive to or intolerant of statins (Sirtori et al. Reference Sirtori, Pazzucconi, Colombo, Battistin, Bondioli and Descheemaeker1999). In addition, three new papers were included, one from Denmark (Hermansen et al. Reference Hermansen, Hansen, Jacobsen, Clausen, Dalgaard, Dinesen, Holst, Pedersen and Astrup2005) and two from Taiwan (Chen et al. Reference Chen, Ferng, Yang, Peng, Lee and Chen2005, Reference Chen, Chen, Yang, Peng and Ferng2006). These last two, involving renal patients using 30 g/d soya protein, reported highly significant reductions in cholesterol level. Thus, in total, we report here the results from twenty-five different publications.
Results
The characteristics and results of the selected papers are shown in Table 1. Some of these reported two studies: in four papers, cholesterol changes observed both in the complete population and, separately, in hypercholesterolaemic patients are reported (Wong et al. Reference Wong, Smith, Stuff, Hachey, Heird and Pownell1998; Crouse et al. Reference Crouse, Morgan, Terry, Ellis, Vitolins and Burke1999; Lichtenstein et al. Reference Lichtenstein, Jalbert, Adlercreutz, Goldin, Rasmussen, Schaefer and Ausman2002; Chen et al. Reference Chen, Ferng, Yang, Peng, Lee and Chen2005). Two papers investigated different daily intakes of soya protein (Teixeira et al. Reference Teixeira, Potter, Weigel, Hannum, Erdman and Hasler2000; Tonstad et al. Reference Tonstad, Smerud and Hoie2002), and two papers considered the same amount of soya protein but with varying isoflavone contents (Gardner et al. Reference Gardner, Newell, Cherin and Haskell2001; Jenkins et al. Reference Jenkins, Kendall, Jackson, Connelly, Parker, Faulkner, Vidgen, Cunnane, Leiter and Josse2002).
F, female; menop., menopausal; HC, hypercholesterolaemia; LC, low cholesterol; M, male; Para, parallel design; DB, double blind; X, cross-over design; ISP, isolated soya proteins; IF, isoflavones.
Unlike other studies dealing with the same topic (Sacks et al. Reference Sacks, Lichtenstein, Van Horn, Harris, Kris-Etherton and Winston2006), net changes in total and LDL-cholesterol levels, obtained by subtracting the cholesterol changes after the reference diet, considered as a ‘control’, are not given as percentage changes in Table 1 but as absolute changes (mg/dl). This allows a more direct comparison with the CI of the Anderson meta-analysis. This same criterion was used historically in the calculation of plasma cholesterol reductions well before Keys' equations, predicting cholesterolaemia following modifications in the polyunsaturated:saturated fat ratio or in the cholesterol content of the diet (Keys et al. Reference Keys, Anderson and Grande1965a, Reference Keys, Anderson and Grandeb).
In the studies shown in Table 1, the ingestion of a diet containing soy protein, compared with a control diet, was accompanied by a moderate reduction in total (mean − 11·7 mg/dl) and LDL-cholesterol (mean − 8·6 mg/dl). Apparently, these values are significantly smaller than those reported in the Anderson meta-analysis ( − 23 mg/dl in total cholesterol and − 21·7 mg/dl in LDL-cholesterol).
Since the detailed correlation analysis presented in the Anderson study clearly demonstrated that the square of the initial plasma cholesterol level was the main significant predictor of the change in cholesterol concentration (i.e. it explained 77·3 % of the variance v. 12·6 % for type of diet, and only 1·0 % for type of soya protein), it was decided to divide the studies into quartiles. This is presented in Table 2, also reporting the data from the original Table 4 of the Anderson meta-analysis.
In the meta-analysis, subjects who had initial cholesterol values below 200 mg/dl had non-significant mean reductions of 5·2 mg/dl; those with mild hypercholesterolaemia (initial values of 200–255 mg/dl) had mean reductions of 10·1 mg/dl; those with moderate hypercholesterolaemia (initial values of 259–333 mg/dl) showed a mean reduction of 22·2 mg/dl; finally, those with severe hypercholesterolaemia (initial cholesterol level of 335–410 mg/dl) had a mean reduction of 71·5 mg/dl. Classifying the new studies with the same criteria, five belonged to the first, fourteen to the second and fourteen to the third quartile. No recent study belonged to the fourth quartile as treatment with statins or other lipid-lowering drugs is now mandatory in these patients. Mean changes in serum cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol concentrations of the studies grouped according to the Anderson quartiles are reported in Table 2. Subjects with normal cholesterol levels (first quartile) had mean reductions of 3·6 mg/dl; those with mild hypercholesterolaemia (second quartile) had mean reductions of 5·0 mg/dl, and those with moderate hypercholesterolaemia (third quartile) had mean reductions of 18·5 mg/dl. These values are just 3–5 mg/dl less than the reductions reported in the Anderson meta-analysis but always well inside ranges defined by the 95 % CI.
Figure 1 provides a chart that we propose calling the ‘Anderson nomogram’. In this, each box indicates the range of initial total cholesterol (y-axis) and the 95 % CI of cholesterol change (x-axis) for each quartile. This nomogram allows checking immediately whether or not any particular study falls within the prediction of the Anderson meta-analysis. Each point on the graph represents one recent study examined in the present paper. The five studies that belonged to the first quartile and thirteen out of fourteen studies that belonged to the second quartile gave results perfectly in line with the Anderson prediction. Out of the fourteen studies belonging to the third quartile, ten agreed with the nomogram, whereas two gave lower cholesterol reductions (Blum et al. Reference Blum, Lang, Vigder, Israeli, Gumanovsky, Lupovitz, Elgazi, Peleg and Ben-Ami2003; Cuevas et al. Reference Cuevas, Irribarra, Castillo, Yanez and Germain2003) and two higher reductions (Chen et al. Reference Chen, Ferng, Yang, Peng, Lee and Chen2005, Reference Chen, Chen, Yang, Peng and Ferng2006). Thus, these thirty-three recent studies are well in agreement with the Anderson meta-analysis and confirm its validity.
Discussion
We investigated whether, by applying the same criteria used in the Anderson meta-analysis, i.e. evaluation of the net cholesterol change compared with baseline plasma cholesterol level, we could detect a prediction model allowing future studies on soya products to be evaluated in terms of their cholesterol-reducing potential. This allowed us to prepare a nomogram that clearly and visually confirmed what was already distinctly stated in the Anderson meta-analysis: that the plasma cholesterol response to soya protein is not linear, but rather correlates to the square of baseline cholesterol level.
There is apparently a threshold level that needs to be reached before a significant reduction in plasma cholesterol occurs, and the cholesterol response is far more dramatic in individuals with the highest cholesterolaemias. In brief, any study carried out on individuals with cholesterol levels below 240–250 mg/dl will most likely lead to minimal (probably clinically insignificant) cholesterol reductions. This was already evident from the earliest clinical study (Sirtori et al. Reference Sirtori, Agradi, Conti, Mantero and Gatti1977), carried out on inpatients given a complete substitution of animal proteins with soya proteins. In this, in spite of the similarity and obligatory adherence to the dietary regimen for all patients, individuals with cholesterol levels in the range 240–250 mg/dl (Fig. 2 in the original paper) showed only minimal reductions. A somewhat similar finding was reported by Bakhit et al. (Reference Bakhit, Klein, Essex-Sorlie, Ham, Erdman and Potter1994), when evaluating the effects of adding 25 g/d soya proteins (the final daily amount recommended by the US Food and Drug Administration) to the diet of individuals with varying baseline plasma cholesterol levels. In this series, the threshold for cholesterol reduction compared with no reduction, or possibly a cholesterol increase, was indicated at approximately 220 mg/dl. In this study too, definite reductions occurred in subjects with cholesterolaemias of around 240 mg/dl. It may be worthy of note that, in spite of publication of the Anderson meta-analysis, more than one third of the recent studies quoted (thirteen out of thirty-three) were based on patients with initial cholesterol levels below 240 mg/dl.
As pertains to the more marked cholesterol reductions occurring in hypercholesterolaemic individuals, the ‘threshold’ seems to be around 280–300 mg/dl (Anderson et al. Reference Anderson, Johnstone and Cook-Newell1995; Sirtori et al. Reference Sirtori, Lovati, Gianazza, Bondioli, Staels and Auwerx1998). If the basic mechanism of cholesterol reduction, i.e. LDL-receptor upregulation, the object of a series of reports by our group (Lovati et al. Reference Lovati, C. Manzoni, Canavesi, Sirtori, Vaccarino, Marchi, Gaddi and Sirtori1987, Duranti et al. Reference Duranti, Lovati, Dani, Barbiroli, Scarafoni, Castiglioni, Ponzone and Morazzoni2004) and confirmed by other investigators (Baum et al. Reference Baum, Teng and Erdman1998), is accepted, it then becomes reasonable to conclude that this mechanism is most likely to be effective in carriers of an LDL-receptor deficiency status (Brown & Goldstein, Reference Brown and Goldstein2004), i.e. those with more severe hypercholesterolaemias, compared with moderately hypercholesterolaemic individuals. In the past 10 years, only two studies, by our group, have examined individuals with initial cholesterol levels above 300 mg/dl (Sirtori et al. Reference Sirtori, Pazzucconi, Colombo, Battistin, Bondioli and Descheemaeker1999, Reference Sirtori, Bosisio, Pazzucconi, Bondioli, Gatti, Lovati and Murphy2002), both belonging to the third quartile of the Anderson nomogram.
A surprising finding, when comparing recent with earlier studies using soya protein, given as a total dietary substitute, is that even with partial substitution or just addition, remarkable cholesterol reductions occurred in severely hypercholesterolaemic individuals. This was particularly noticeable in two papers on patients on dialysis, in which 30 g/d soya protein were included in the diet as a drink (Chen et al. Reference Chen, Ferng, Yang, Peng, Lee and Chen2005, Reference Chen, Chen, Yang, Peng and Ferng2006). A paper that has compared different daily soya protein intakes in hypercholesterolaemic individuals seems to indicate that increasing the intake above 30 g/d does not improve the response (Tonstad et al. Reference Tonstad, Smerud and Hoie2002). It is possible that the absorption of intact soya peptides (Duranti et al. Reference Duranti, Lovati, Dani, Barbiroli, Scarafoni, Castiglioni, Ponzone and Morazzoni2004) after dietary addition may be associated with activation of the liver LDL-receptor system in a similar way to that found after total soya substitution (Lovati et al. Reference Lovati, C. Manzoni, Canavesi, Sirtori, Vaccarino, Marchi, Gaddi and Sirtori1987).
In conclusion, the majority of studies on hypercholesterolaemic individuals treated with a soya protein-based regimen fall within the 95 % CI indicated in the Anderson nomogram. Only three studies showed a lesser effectiveness, whereas in two a higher effectiveness was observed (Fig. 1). Parallel evaluations of reductions in LDL-cholesterol lead to the same conclusions. These findings clearly indicate that the nomogram of cholesterol reduction based on individual plasma cholesterol levels is a good predictor of cholesterol changes in studies carried out after the Anderson meta-analysis. The meta-analysis was based on a wide variety of studies, some with a total substitution of dietary proteins, others with only a partial substitution, whereas all the recent studies involved partial substitutions/additions. This observation clearly suggests that the beneficial effects of soya proteins are probably not consequent on gross dietary changes, for example in lipid composition, fibre or other substances, as suggested by some authors (Lichtenstein et al. Reference Lichtenstein, Jalbert, Adlercreutz, Goldin, Rasmussen, Schaefer and Ausman2002; Sacks et al. Reference Sacks, Lichtenstein, Van Horn, Harris, Kris-Etherton and Winston2006), but most likely depend on some components that elicit a ‘pharmacological effect’ on the LDL-receptor system (Anderson, Reference Anderson2003). This conclusion would thus be no different from that relating to the hypotensive activity of milk peptides, antagonists of the angiotensin-converting enzyme system (Vermeirssen et al. Reference Vermeirssen, Van Camp and Verstraete2004), and clearly effective only in hypertensive individuals.