Dietary supplementation with seed oil from transgenic Camelina sativa induces similar increments in plasma and erythrocyte DHA and EPA to fish oil in healthy humans

The British Journal of Nutrition
Q1
Jun 2020
Citations:22
Influential Citations:0
Interventional (Human) Studies
81
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Methods
Design: randomized, blinded, two-period crossover trial. Participants: 31 healthy adults (men and women), aged 20–74 years.
Intervention
Two 8-week supplementation periods separated by a 6-week washout, delivering 450 mg EPA+DHA per day from either Camelina sativa seed oil (CSO) or fish oil (FO); CSO dose 2.4 mL/day; FO dose 1.6 mL/day; taken once daily in the morning before breakfast.
Results
Both CSO and FO increased EPA and DHA in plasma lipid classes (PC, TAG, CE) and in erythrocytes after 8 weeks, with no significant difference between oils in the magnitude of these increases. Erythrocyte EPA+DHA rose ~27% (FO) and ~40% (CSO); erythrocyte DHA increased with CSO (~6%) while FO did not show a significant DHA change. Plasma EPA and DHA increased across lipid classes for both oils (e.g., plasma PC EPA: FO +49%, CSO +79%; plasma PC DHA: FO +49%, CSO +74%; plasma TAG EPA: FO +50%, CSO +98%; plasma TAG DHA: FO +41%, CSO +72%). Omega-3 index rose by ~8% (FO) and ~12% (CSO). There were no significant differences between oils in these lipid changes. FO reduced fasting plasma glucose (~4%) and total TAG (~20%); CSO did not alter glucose or TAG. Overall, CSO is as effective as FO for increasing blood EPA and DHA and may offer a sustainable, acceptable alternative that aligns with dietary choices; health outcomes were not assessed in this study.
Limitations
Small sample size (n=31); short duration (8 weeks per oil); relatively low EPA+DHA dose (450 mg/d) for detecting health outcomes; healthy, normolipidaemic population limits generalizability; incomplete blinding due to residual FO odor; not powered to evaluate health outcomes or subgroups.

Abstract

Abstract EPA and DHA are required for normal cell function and can also induce health benefits. Oily fish are the main source of EPA and DHA for human consumption. However, food choices and concerns about the sustainability of marine fish stocks limi...