Benefits and Harms of Edible Vegetable Oils and Fats Fortified with Vitamins A and
D as a Public Health Intervention in the General Population: A Systematic Review of
Interventions
This systematic review aims to assess whether edible vegetable oils and fats fortified
with vitamin A and/or D are effective and safe in improving vitamin intake and ameliorating
deficiency states in the general population. In November 2022, we systematically searched
MEDLINE, Cochrane CENTRAL, Scopus, Global Index Medicus, ClinicalTrials.gov, and WHO
ICTRP (International Clinical Trials Registry Platform) for randomized controlled
trials (RCT) and non-randomized studies of interventions (NRSI) investigating the
fortification of edible vegetable oils and fats with either vitamin A or vitamin D
or both as compared to the same vegetable oils and/or fats without vitamin A and D
fortification or no interventions, in the general population, without age restriction.
We assessed the methodological quality of included RCTs using Cochrane’s risk of bias
tool 2.0 and of NRSIs using ROBINS-I tool. We performed random-effects meta-analysis
and assessed certainty of evidence using GRADE. We included eight studies. Available
evidence showed no significant effect of fortification with vitamin A on serum retinol
levels (RCTs: MD 0.35 µmol/L, 95% CI −0.43 to 1.12; two trials; 514 participants;
low-certainty evidence; CCTs: MD 0.31 µmol/L, 95% CI −0.18 to 0.80; two trials; 205
participants; very low-certainty evidence) and on subclinical vitamin A deficiency.
Low-certainty evidence showed no effect of vitamin D fortification on serum 25-hydroxy
vitamin D concentration (MD 6.59 nmol/L, 95% CI −6.89 to 20.07; one trial; 62 participants).
In conclusion, vitamin A-fortified vegetable oils and fats may result in little to
no difference in serum retinol levels in general populations. The dose of vitamin
A used in the trials may be safe but may not be sufficient to reduce subclinical vitamin
A deficiency. Further, the evidence suggests that vitamin D fortification results
in little to no difference in serum 25-hydroxy vitamin D concentration. Several aspects
of providing fortified oils and fats to the general population as a public health
intervention should be further investigated, including optimal fortification dose,
effects on vitamin D deficiency and its clinical symptoms and potential adverse effects.