Omega-6 and total polyunsaturated fat for the primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease
Lee Hooper, Asmaa Abdelhamid, Helen J Moore · Systematic review
BlueRipple Assessment
Replace some saturated fat with polyunsaturated fat and the heart benefits — that’s the dietary orthodoxy. This Cochrane review asks how much the randomized evidence actually delivers.
Pooling 49 trials and more than 24,000 participants followed at least a year, the answer is sobering in its modesty. Increasing polyunsaturated fat made little or no difference to overall or cardiovascular mortality, and only slightly reduced heart-disease and combined cardiovascular events, alongside a small drop in triglycerides. A real signal, but a faint one.
The practical takeaway is measured: nudging polyunsaturated fat up, particularly in place of saturated fat, offers small cardiovascular benefit — worth doing, not transformative. The resistance comes from advocates of high-saturated-fat diets and the industries behind them, who seize on exactly this modesty.
We rate the evidence solid in method but humble in result: Cochrane systematic-review rigor and a large sample, tempered by heterogeneity and small effect sizes. Its clinical significance is modest — incremental dietary guidance with no demonstrated mortality benefit, which is itself a useful corrective to overclaiming in either direction.
The original source
Hooper L, Abdelhamid A, Moore HJ, et al. Omega-6 and total polyunsaturated fat for the primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2019;CD012345.
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