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n-3 Fatty acids and mood: the devil is in the detail

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 February 2008

Alex J. Richardson*
Affiliation:
Department of PhysiologyAnatomy and GeneticsUniversity of OxfordSherrington BuildingParks RoadOxfordOX1 3PTUK Email: [email protected]
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Extract

Increasing evidence suggests that a low dietary intake of the n-3 long-chain PUFA EPA and DHA may contribute not only to the risks for various physical illnesses (particularly cardiovascular and immune system disorders), but also to many disorders of mental health and performance1,2. From their recent comprehensive review of the evidence for these n-3 fatty acids in the prevention and treatment of psychiatric disorders3, the American Psychiatric Association (APA) made the following recommendations:

Type
Commentary
Copyright
Copyright © The Author 2007

  • all adults should eat fish at least twice weekly;

  • patients with mood, impulse control or psychotic disorders should consume 1 g/d EPA+DHA (the n-3 fatty acids found in oily fish and fish oils);

  • a supplement (providing 1–9 g/d EPA+DHA) may be useful in patients with mood disorders. Use of >3 g/d should be monitored by a physician.

It was strongly emphasised that these recommendations are not intended as a substitute for standard treatments for psychiatric disorders, as most trials to date have used n-3 fatty acids adjunctively.

The recommendation of the APA of 1–9 g/d EPA+DHA (combined) for mood disorders followed from their meta-analysis of eight trials involving adults with clinical depression or bipolar disorder, showing overall benefits from supplementation with these n-3 fatty acids (P < 0·03). This showed considerable heterogeneity, however, so the need to examine carefully the differences between study populations, as well as specific formulations and doses used, was emphasised. It was also pointed out that treatment primarily or exclusively with EPA appeared to be most effective.

In view of this, it seems unfortunate that a high-DHA formulation was chosen for the trial reported in this issue of the BJN by Rogers and colleaguesReference Rogers, Appleton, Kessler, Peters, Gunnell, Hayward, Heatherley, Christian, McNaughton and Ness4, which showed no effects on mood or cognition in generally healthy adults from 12 weeks of supplementation with n-3 fatty acids. Clearly this population differs from those considered by the APA, both in having no formal psychiatric diagnoses and in receiving no other treatment for their mood symptoms, but the rationale for the study was sensible. The prevalence of mild to moderate depression in primary care settings (where most participants were recruited) is high, and concerns about antidepressant medications, along with mounting evidence linking low n-3 fatty acid intake to mood disorders, have raised the very important question of whether simple dietary interventions to improve that intake might improve depressive symptoms in this population. The issues involved are not simple, however, and definitive answers must still await further research.

The evidence supporting the use of EPA+DHA in the management of psychiatric disorders appears strongest for conditions involving disturbances of mood/anxiety and/or impulse control. Thus in addition to the benefits for major depression and bipolar disorder highlighted by the APA's meta-analysis of studies of these patientsReference Freeman, Hibbeln, Wisner, Davis, Mischoulon, Peet, Keck, Marangell, Richardson, Lake and Stoll3, 1 g/d EPA reduced both depression and hostility in patients with borderline personality disorderReference Zanarini and Frankenburg5. In two newer studies, 1·2 g EPA +0·9 g DHA improved depression, suicidality and daily stresses (but not impulsivity, aggression and hostility) in patients with recurrent self-harmReference Hallahan, Hibbeln, Davis and Garland6, and 2·3 g EPA +0·5 g DHA reduced anxiety in a pilot study of substance abusersReference Buydens-Branchey and Branchey7. By contrast, a separate meta-analysis by the APA's reviewers of four trials involving schizophrenia patients showed no overall benefits for psychotic symptoms, although it was noted that an increased intake of n-3 fatty acids might help to combat the increased risks of CVD, diabetes and other physical health problems associated with this illness, which are exacerbated by some antipsychotic medications. Some benefits for mood, impulsivity, stress-aggression and other aspects of behaviour or cognition have also been reported in psychiatrically normal populationsReference Hamazaki, Sawazaki, Itomura, Asaoka, Nagao, Nishimura, Yazawa, Kuwamori and Kobayashi8, Reference Fontani, Corradeschi, Felici, Alfatti, Migliorini and Lodi9, children with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder and related conditionsReference Richardson10, and patients with mild dementiaReference Freund-Levi, Eriksdotter-Jonhagen, Cederholm, Basun, Faxen-Irving, Garlind, Vedin, Vessby, Wahlund and Palmblad11, although findings in these areas remain preliminary or mixed, and most studies have been small.

This new study by Rogers and colleaguesReference Rogers, Appleton, Kessler, Peters, Gunnell, Hayward, Heatherley, Christian, McNaughton and Ness4 set out to investigate whether n-3 fatty acid supplementation could improve mental health in a sample more representative of the general population. As they noted, existing evidence does suggest that adults with sub-clinical depressive symptoms might be likely candidates to benefit from an increased n-3 fatty acid intake. So their choice of a new population to study makes good sense. But pooling their results with those of other trials involving very different populations does not. This all-encompassing approach to meta-analysis was used in an earlier publication from the same groupReference Appleton, Hayward, Gunnell, Peters, Rogers, Kessler and Ness12, and it is repeated in the current paper, with the inclusion of this latest trial. What have males with angina, chronic patients with schizophrenia, and mothers who choose to breastfeed got in common? They all show no improvements in ‘mood’ following ‘n-3 fatty acid supplementation’ in these meta-analyses. And what might ‘n-3 fatty acid supplementation’ mean here? Well, these chronic schizophrenia patients received 3 g/d pure ethyl-EPA (other studies of schizophrenia using lower doses were not included), the breastfeeding mothers received only 200 mg/d pure algal-source DHA; and the angina sufferers were apparently just told to ‘eat more fatty fish’ or were given ‘EPA capsules’, with no dose reported. It seems less than meaningful to combine results from studies using such totally diverse populations and treatments. Furthermore, these three particular (negative) trials receive 50 % of the total weight in the latest meta-analysis, and the new (negative) trial of generally healthy adults adds a further 17 %. The overall conclusion is therefore that EPA+DHA has no effect on mood, although the positive results in patients with diagnosed mood disorders are acknowledged elsewhere in both papers.

Useful meta-analyses require expertise in both methodology and the specific subject area. Combining different populations is one potential confound; but combining totally different treatment formulations and dosages can be equally misleading, and doing both together can multiply any confusion. The actual treatment used is obviously rather a key factor, but in this particular field it is all too often overlooked. Ideally, separate meta-analyses should be performed by formulation and dosage. Unfortunately, treatments have differed so widely in trials of n-3 fatty acids for mental health and performance that this approach remains impractical until more studies are forthcoming. As the APA group emphasised, close examination of individual trials is warranted in the meanwhile; and the current pattern shows a clear superiority of EPA over DHA for these purposes.

This is not what most people might have predicted, because DHA is an essential component of neuronal membranes and thus critical to the very structure of the brain and nervous system, while EPA is not. EPA can affect brain function, however, in a huge number of ways. Its eicosanoid derivatives are key regulators of immune, endocrine and cardiovascular functions, and EPA has direct actions on cyclo-oxygenases, lipoxygenases, phospholipases, acylating systems, ion channels, mitochondria and PPAR, as well as regulatory influences on gene expression. The mechanisms underlying any treatment benefits observed still remain a matter for speculation and future research, but so far EPA does seem to produce better results than DHA for adult psychiatric disorders.

Thus studies using either pure DHA, or more DHA than EPA, for adult mental health symptoms have all been negative to date; and Rogers and colleagues’ study has joined this list. By contrast, pure EPA has shown benefits in several trials (but only at doses of 1–2 g/d), and all positive studies in this area have used more EPA than DHA (ratios 1·8 to infinity; most ordinary fish oils provide around 1·5). The few controlled trials in children with behavioural and learning difficulties also suggest that EPA may be more effective than DHA, although the picture here is less clear, and is complicated by other ingredients such as antioxidants and n-6 fatty acidsReference Richardson10. There are just two underpowered dose-ranging trials to date, both in adults with psychiatric disorders, and using 1, 2 or 4 g/d pure ethyl-EPA. For depression, the 1 g dose performed best (2 or 4 g were no better than placebo)Reference Peet and Horrobin13 and for schizophrenia, only the 2 g dose showed any benefitsReference Peet and Horrobin14. Any successful trials using higher doses have provided EPA and DHA in combination, and this may be important, as high doses of any one fatty acid could potentially create imbalances in fatty acid profiles.

In keeping with UK guidelines, Rogers and colleagues used n-3 fatty acid dose that was realistically achievable from the diet, in this case 1·5 g EPA+DHA in total. This is above the 500 mg/d EPA+DHA recommended for maintaining cardiovascular health15. However, for reasons unspecified, an unusually low ratio of EPA:DHA of 0·7 was chosen and so the supplement provided less than the minimum 1 g/d EPA indicated as efficacious by previous research. For a relatively large-scale study that otherwise appears extremely well-designed and conducted, this seems a very strange decision. The negative results certainly add to the case against DHA-rich formulations for mood. But they also represent a wasted opportunity to find out if the existing evidence that n-3 fatty acids can (adjunctively) help patients with mood disorders might extend (as monotherapy) into the general population. It can only be hoped that neither this study, nor the use of over-inclusive meta-analyses, will deter the further research that is still urgently needed to address this question.

Acknowledgements

Financial support from the UK charity Food and Behaviour Research is gratefully acknowledged. Independently, I also act as a consultant to several companies that make foods or supplements containing fatty acids.

References

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