I have read with interest the study by Lu et al.(Reference Lu, Qiao and Mi1), who summarised the available evidence regarding the effects of n-3 PUFA on symptoms of depression. Unfortunately, the study likely failed to provide a truly comprehensive perspective on the topic and may have presented unreliable conclusions.
According to the authors, the last search was performed in June 2021, but at least one eligible meta-analysis (published in March 2021) is missing(Reference Deane, Jimoh and Biswas2). Considering that Lu et al. were interested in any population of adults, according to their Population, Intervention, Comparison and Outcomes (PICO) criteria, the study by O’Deane et al. (2021)(Reference Deane, Jimoh and Biswas2) provided relevant data and should have been included. This high-quality review presents a Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluations (GRADE) assessment based on thirty-two trials suggesting that increasing n-3 PUFA probably has little or no effect on the risk of depression symptoms in those without depression at baseline (moderate quality of evidence), and there is a signal of increased risk of depressive symptoms associated with increasing α-linolenic acid intake. Effects on depression severity and remission were unclear (very low quality of evidence), and overall data were considered insufficient to recommend n-3 supplements for reducing depression risk or treating an existing depression(Reference Deane, Jimoh and Biswas2).
Lu and colleagues cited three versions of a high-quality Cochrane Review by Appleton et al. (2006, 2010 and 2016) but overlooked its latest update from November 2021, which includes the most extensive dataset (n 33) among all published meta-analyses(Reference Appleton, Voyias and Sallis3). The review concludes there is insufficient evidence to determine the effects of n-3 PUFA as a treatment for Major Depressive Disorder. Importantly, sensitivity analyses restricted to low risk of bias trials convincingly suggest that the often observed benefit in meta-analyses is probably a reflection of publication bias and overestimated results from small, high risk of bias trials(Reference Appleton, Voyias and Sallis3). The latest Cochrane Review was probably omitted because Lu et al. conducted their last search in June 2021. For this very reason, by the time the article was submitted to the British Journal of Nutrition (October 2023), their own review had already been outdated for over 2 years. This is not an uncommon occurrence in biomedical research(Reference Créquit, Trinquart and Yavchitz4,Reference Beller, Chen and Wang5) , despite explicit recommendations in the Cochrane Handbook to ‘rerun searches for relevant sources prior to publication if the initial search date is more than 12 months (preferably six months) from the intended publication date’(Reference Higgins, Thomas and Chandler6).
In order to identify other potentially missing studies, I first attempted replicating the bibliographic search using the search strategy provided in the supplementary material. Surprisingly, the search yields 14 679 results on PubMed alone (from inception to 30 June 2021). This is largely inconsistent with the authors’ report of a ‘comprehensive systematic search’ that retrieved only 101 records across five allegedly examined databases – of which an uncommon proportion of nearly 60 % records were duplicates. Restricting to records indexed during the gap from June 2021 to October 2023, a total of 7246 studies were found to be screened. Out of these records, I have identified several additional eligible meta-analyses of randomised controlled trials, according to Lu et al.’s pre-specified PICO criteria: Iqbal et al. (September 2023)(Reference Iqbal, Wu and Zailani7); Osouli-Tabrizi et al. (May 2023)(Reference Osouli-Tabrizi, Mehdizadeh and Naghdi8); Tung et al. (September 2023)(Reference Tung, Wong and Mak9); Candido et al. (June 2023)(Reference Candido, Ferraz and Uggioni10); Kelaiditis et al. (April 2023)(Reference Kelaiditis, Gibson and Dyall11); Simon et al. (Jan 2023)(Reference Simon, Arteaga-Henríquez and Fouad Algendy12); Decandia et al. (May 2022)(Reference Decandia, Landolfo and Sacchetti13); Arsenyadis et al. (April 2022)(Reference Arsenyadis, Ahmad and Redman14); Nevins et al. (November 2021)(Reference Nevins, Donovan and Snetselaar15); Hang et al. (July 2021)(Reference Hang, Zhang and Li16); and Kishi et al. (July 2021)(Reference Kishi, Sakuma and Okuya17). In total, thirteen out of (at least) thirty-five eligible studies are missing from the review.
Attempts to synthesise large bodies of evidence are undeniably challenging; however, it is imperative that such studies are conducted according to the highest possible standards. Failing to do so entails a risk of seriously misleading researchers, practitioners, policymakers and consumers. I hereby contend that the conclusions of Lu et al. were unfortunately based on an outdated umbrella review at high risk of selection bias. Their study fails to mention over a third of the available research (including a high-quality Cochrane Review) and thus cannot be taken as reliable evidence to address the efficacy, safety or applicability of n-3 fatty acids for depression.
Acknowledgements
The author declares that no funding was received for this article.
Igor Eckert: Conceptualization, Resources, Writing – Original Draft, Writing – Review and Editing, Supervision.
The author declares that there are no conflicts of interest in relation to the subject of this study.