Eggs: Healthy or Risky? A Review of Evidence from High Quality Studies on Hen’s Eggs
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials & Methods
3. Nutritional Benefits and Risks
3.1. Intakes in Europe
3.2. Overview of Egg Nutrition
3.3. Choline
3.4. Vitamin D
3.5. Folate
3.6. Iodine
3.7. Protein
4. Results: Risk Assessment
4.1. Cardiovascular Health and Cholesterol
4.2. Metabolic Health
Author, Year | Study Design | Intervention | Number of Participants | Outcomes | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Andersen, 2013 [69] | SBRCT, parallel | 3 eggs/day or yolk-free egg substitute + moderately carbohydrate-restricted diet for 12-weeks | 37 adults with MetS (30–70 y) | Blood lipids | Egg group had significantly greater increase in HDL-c vs. egg substitute group No significant change to LDL-c or TC. |
Blesso, 2013 [70] | SBRCT, parallel | 3 eggs/day or yolk-free substitute + moderately carbohydrate-restricted diet for 12-weeks | 37 adults with MetS (51.9 ± 7.7 y) | Carotenoid status | Egg group had significantly increased plasma lutein and zeaxanthin vs. egg-substitute group. Significant lipoprotein enrichment with lutein and zeaxanthin in egg group only. |
Blesso, 2013 [71] | SBRCT, parallel | 3 eggs/day or yolk-free substitute + moderately carbohydrate-restricted diet for 12-weeks | 37 adults with MetS (51.9 ± 7.7 y) | Blood lipids, insulin resistance | Egg group had significantly greater increases in HDL-c, large HDL-c particles, LCAT activity and HDL-c and LDL-c diameters vs. egg-substitute group Egg group had significantly reduced plasma insulin, HOMA-IR and VLDL-c vs. egg-substitute group. |
Thomas, 2022 [73] | RCT, crossover | 2 eggs/day with 70 g spinach or yolk-free egg substitute with 70 g spinach + meat-free diet for 4 weeks | 24 adults with MetS (49.3 ± 8 y) | Oxidative stress, inflammation | Egg group had significantly lower plasma malondialdehyde compared with egg substitute group. No significant differences in other biomarkers. MetS characteristics reversed in 11 participants during the egg diet and 7 participants during the egg substitute diet. |
Thomas, 2022 [72] | RCT, crossover | 2 eggs/day with 70 g spinach or yolk-free egg substitute with 70 g spinach + meat-free diet for 4 weeks | 24 adults with MetS (49.3 ± 8 y) | Inflammatory markers, blood lipids | Egg group had significant reduction in weight and BMI compared with egg substitute diet. Egg group had significant increase in HDL-c, large HDL-c particles and choline compared with baseline Plasma zeaxanthin rose significantly during egg diet compared with egg substitute diet and with baseline. |
Thomas, 2022 [74] | RCT, crossover | 3 eggs/day or choline supplement for 4 weeks | 23 adults with MetS (35–70 y) | Plasma TMAO, carotenoid status, gut microbiome | Significant increases in plasma choline seen in both interventions No change to plasma TMAO or gut microbiome during either intervention. Plasma lutein and zeaxanthin increased during egg intervention relative to baseline and choline treatment. |
5. Results: Benefits Assessment
5.1. Weight Management and Satiety
5.2. Myoprotection in Adults
Author, Year. | Study Design | Intervention | Number of Participants | Outcomes | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Hida, 2012 [89] | DBRCT, parallel | Egg white protein vs. carbohydrate supplement for 8-weeks | 30 female athletes (18–22 y) | Exercise performance and body composition | Serum urea increased in egg group. No difference between diet groups for change in muscle mass, strength tests or body fat. |
Van Vliet, 2017 [85] | RCT, crossover | Whole egg vs. egg white (protein matched), acute | 10 men (21 ± 1 y) | Post-exercise muscle protein synthesis | Protein-derived leucine appeared more rapidly in plasma following egg white. Whole egg significantly increased post-exercise myofibrillar protein synthetic response vs. egg white. |
Kim, 2017 [91] | RCT, crossover, acute | Egg breakfast vs. cereal breakfast (protein matched), acute | 12 adults (57–74 y) | Net protein balance (anabolic response) | Protein breakdown significantly lower and post-meal net protein balance significantly higher after eggs vs. cereal. |
Wright, 2018 [93] | RCT, parallel | High protein diet (3 eggs/day) vs. normal protein diet (no eggs) for 12 weeks | 22 adults (50–80 y) | Muscle and body composition | High protein egg diet significantly reduced subcutaneous fat to muscle volume in mid-calf. Low protein egg-free diet significantly reduced lean mass and trunk mass. No differences in body weight. |
Bagheri, 2020 [86] | SBRCT, parallel | Whole egg vs. egg white diet (protein matched) + resistance training for 12 weeks | 30 men (24.6 ± 2.7 y) | Body composition, knee extensor muscle mass, muscular strength, anaerobic power, hormonal response | Whole egg diet significantly reduced percent body fat (−2.7%) and increased hand and quadriceps strength and serum testosterone vs. egg white diet. |
Bagheri, 2020 [87] | SBRCT, parallel | Whole egg vs. egg white (protein matched) + resistance training for 12 weeks | 30 men (24.6 ± 2.7 y) | Body composition, skeletal muscle regulatory markers | No significant differences between groups for body composition or muscle regulatory markers. Similar increases in body weight and muscle mass and reductions in body fat for both diet/exercise groups. |
Park, 2021 [90] | SBRCT, parallel, acute | Beef vs. pork vs. eggs vs. kidney beans vs. mixed nuts vs. peanut butter vs. tofu | 56 adults (18–40 y) | Net protein balance (anabolic response) | Whole-body net protein balance significantly greater following animal protein diets vs. plant protein diets. Compared with high mixed nuts, high pork and eggs suppressed protein breakdown to a greater extent. |
Ullevig, 2022 [92] | DBRCT, parallel | Egg white protein supplement vs. carbohydrate supplement for 6-months | 29 females (73.6 ± 8.3 y) | Body composition, strength and physical function | Hand grip strength and number of arm curls significantly increased from baseline in egg group only. No significant differences in body composition between groups. |
6. Other Dietary Aspects Relating to Eggs
6.1. Sustainability
6.2. Allergy Risk
6.3. Food-Borne Disease Risk
7. Discussion of Benefits vs. Risks
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Nutrient | Per 100 g Whole Raw Egg | Per Medium Egg a 58 g | % Recommendation b Per Serving (2 Eggs) |
---|---|---|---|
Energy kcal | 131 | 66 | 7 |
Protein g | 12.6 | 6.4 | 26 |
Carbohydrate g | Tr | Tr | Tr |
Fat g | 9 | 4.6 | 13 |
Saturated fat g | 2.52 | 1.3 | 13 |
Monounsaturated fat g | 3.44 | 1.7 | - |
Cholesterol mg | 350 | 177 | - |
Vitamin A μg | 126 | 64 | 16 |
Vitamin D μg | 3.2 | 1.6 | 64 |
Riboflavin mg | 0.5 | 0.25 | 10 |
Folate μg | 47 | 24 | 24 |
Vitamin B12 μg | 2.7 | 1.4 | 112 |
Choline mg | 285 | 144 | 72 |
Biotin μg | 19.5 | 9.9 | 40 |
Phosphorus mg | 179 | 91 | 26 |
Iron mg | 1.72 | 0.9 | 13 |
Zinc mg | 1.1 | 0.6 | 12 |
Iodine μg | 50 | 25 | 33 |
Selenium μg | 23 | 12 | 44 |
Pantothenic acid mg | 1.35 | 0.7 | 12 |
Nutrient | Cut Offs for ‘Source of’ and ‘High in’ Claims | Content in 100 g of Egg (Edible Portion) | Permitted Nutrition Claim for Eggs | Health Areas Where Authorised Health Claims Apply |
---|---|---|---|---|
Protein | Source of = 12% of energy provided by protein; High in = 20% of energy provided by protein | 38.5% of energy provided by protein | High in protein | Growth and maintenance of muscle mass, maintenance of bones. |
Vitamin D | Source of = 15% of RDA; High in = 30% of RDA | 64% | High in vitamin D | Normal bones and teeth, absorption and utilisation of calcium and phosphorus; normal blood calcium levels, immune function. |
Monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFA) | High in = provides >45% of total fatty acid content and >20% of energy value | 49% of total fatty acid content from MUFA; 24% of energy from MUFA | High in MUFA | None authorised |
Vitamin B12 | Source of = 15% of RDA; High in = 30% of RDA | 108% | High in vitamin B12 | Red blood cell formation, energy metabolism, immune function, nervous system, psychological function, homocysteine metabolism, reduction in tiredness and fatigue. |
Riboflavin | Source of = 15% of RDA; High in = 30% of RDA | 35.7% | High in riboflavin | Energy metabolism, iron metabolism, vision, normal skin and mucous membranes, red blood cells, protection of cells from oxidative stress, nervous system, reduction in tiredness and fatigue. |
Folate | Source of = 15% of RDA; High in = 30% of RDA | 23.5% | Source of folate | Psychological function, blood formation, homocysteine and amino acid metabolism, immune function, maternal tissue growth during pregnancy, reduction in tiredness and fatigue. |
Vitamin A | Source of = 15% of RDA; High in = 30% of RDA | 15.7% | Source of vitamin A | Immune function, normal skin and mucous membranes, vision, iron metabolism. |
Phosphorus | Source of = 15% of RDA; High in = 30% of RDA | 25.5% | Source of phosphorus | Normal function of cell membranes, energy metabolism, normal bones and teeth. |
Selenium | Source of = 15% of RDA; High in = 30% of RDA | 41.8% | High in selenium | Protection of cells from oxidative stress, immune function, normal thyroid function, hair and nails, spermatogenesis. |
Biotin | Source of = 15% of RDA; High in = 30% of RDA | 39% | High in biotin | Psychological function, normal skin, hair and mucous membranes, nervous system. |
Pantothenic acid | Source of = 15% of RDA; High in = 30% of RDA | 22.5% | Source of pantothenic acid | Synthesis of steroid hormones, vitamin D and neurotransmitters, energy metabolism, mental performance, reduction in tiredness and fatigue. |
Iodine | Source of = 15% of RDA; High in = 30% of RDA | 33.3% | High in iodine | Normal thyroid gland function, production of thyroid hormones, energy metabolism, normal skin, cognitive function, nervous system. |
Choline | Health claim allowed if 82.5 mg/100 g food | 285 mg | None authorised | Normal metabolism of fat and homocysteine, maintenance of liver function. |
Author, Year | Study Design | Number of Studies (Number of Participants) | Outcomes | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rouhani, 2017 [44] | SRMA of RCTs | 28 (1734) | Blood lipids | Egg consumption significant increased TC, LDL-c and HDL-c vs. controls. No significant effect on TC/HDL-c ratio, LDL-c/HDL-c ratio or TG. |
Wang, 2019 [45] | SRMA of RCTs | 9 (412) | Blood pressure, blood lipids | >4 eggs/week had no significant effect on blood pressure or blood lipids vs. ≤4 eggs/week. |
Li, 2020 [46] | SRMA of RCTs | 17 (not stated) | Blood lipids | Greater egg consumption significantly increased LDL-c/HDL-c ratio and LDL-c cholesterol vs. controls, particularly in studies with longer duration. No significant effect on HDL-c levels. |
Khalighi Sikaroudi, 2020 [47] | SRMA of RCTs | 66 (3185) | Blood lipids | Egg consumption significantly increased TC, LDL-c, HDL-c, TC/HDL-c ratio and serum apoB100. No significant effect on serum apoA1, TG, VLDL-c or LDL-c/HDL-c ratio. |
Author, Year | Study Design | Number of Studies (Number of Participants) | Outcomes | Significant Differences in Relative Risk between Highest and Lowest Egg Consumers |
---|---|---|---|---|
Li, 2013 [50] | SRMA of PCS | 12 (226,784) | CVD | High consumers had 19% increased risk of CVD incidence (83% in those with unspecified diabetes). DR analysis: 6% greater risk of CVD for every additional 4 eggs/week (40% in those with unspecified diabetes). |
Rong, 2013 [60] | SRMA of PCS | 8 (263,938) | CHD, stroke | No linear association for CHD risk. No DR effect. In those with unspecified diabetes, high egg consumers had 54% increased risk of CHD. No linear association or DR effect for stroke. |
Shin, 2013 [52] | SRMA of PCS | 8 (348,420) | CVD, IHD, stroke | No associations for CVD, IHD or stroke incidence when comparing intakes of <1/week with ≥1/day. In those with unspecified diabetes, high egg consumers had 69% increased risk of CVD. |
Alexander, 2016 [61] | SRMA of PCS | 10 (not stated) | CHD, stroke | No associations for CHD incidence when comparing intakes of <2/week with ≥1/day. 12% reduced risk of stroke in high egg consumers when comparing intakes of <2/week with ≥1/day. |
Xu, 2018 [55] | SRMA of PCS | 9 (not stated) | Stroke, IHD, CVD | No significant associations for IHD risk, CVD mortality, IHD mortality or stroke mortality and egg consumption. 9% reduced risk of stroke in high egg consumers when comparing <1/week with ≥7/week. |
Drouin-Chartier, 2020 [53] | SRMA of PCS | 28 (1,720,108) | CVD, stroke, CHD | No significant associations for CVD, stroke or CHD at egg intakes of 1/day compared with lower intakes. In those with T2D, high egg consumers had 40% increased risk of CVD. DR analysis in T2D: 25% increased risk for each additional egg consumed per day. |
Krittanawong, 2020 [54] | SRMA of PCS | 23 (1,415,839) | CVD, stroke, CAD | No significant associations for risk of CVD. 11% reduced risk of CAD in higher egg consumers when comparing >1/day) to ≤1/day). No associations with risk of stroke. |
Tang, 2020 [62] | SRMA of PCS | 16 (not stated) | Stroke | No significant association between egg intake and risk of stroke but borderline reduced risk in high consumers for stroke mortality. DR analysis: non-linear association between egg consumption and risk of stroke; 1–4/week associated with decreased risk while >10/week associated with increased risk. |
Djoussé, 2021 [63] | Pooled analysis and MA of PCS | 7 (not stated) | CHD | No significant association for risk of CHD even in those with T2D at intakes up to 7+ eggs/week. |
Godos, 2021 [49] | SRMA of PCS | 39 (1,831,083) | CVD, CHD, stroke, heart failure | 4% decreased risk of CVD events/mortality in high egg consumers eating 1–6/week vs. non-consumers. <2 eggs/week associated with 4% decreased risk of CHD incidence and mortality. No association for risk of stroke events or mortality. For heart failure, 15% increased risk at ≤7 eggs/week and 23% increased risk at 9 eggs/week vs. non-consumers. |
Zhao, 2022 [51] | SRMA of PCS | 41 (3,601,401) | CVD | 4% increased risk of CVD for each additional egg/day consumed vs. non-consumers. |
Darooghegi Mofrad, 2022 [56] | SRMA of PCS | 16 (1,479,181) | CVD | No significant associations for CVD mortality at egg intakes of 1/day vs. 0.007/day and no DR effect. |
Ma, 2022 [57] | SRMA of PCS | 14 (not stated) | CVD, IHD, stroke | No significant associations with risk of mortality for CVD, IHD or stroke when comparing high vs. low egg consumption. No DR effects per additional 1 egg/day. |
Yang, 2022 [59] | SRMA of PCS | 9 (943,827) | CVD, stroke | 7% increased risk of CVD mortality with each additional egg/day. No significant associations for stroke mortality. |
Mousavi, 2022 [58] | SRMA of PCS | 32 (2,216,720) | CVD, CHD, stroke | No significant associations with risk of mortality for CVD, CHD or stroke. DR analysis: for each additional 1 egg/week, risk of stroke mortality decreased by 4%. |
Author, Year | Study Design | Number of Studies (Number of Participants) | Outcomes | Significant Differences in Relative Risk between Highest and Lowest Egg Consumers |
---|---|---|---|---|
Li, 2013 [50] | SRMA of PCS | 7 (64,447) | Unspecified DM | High consumers had 68% increased risk of developing T2D. DR analysis: for each additional 4 eggs/week, risk of DM 29% greater. |
Shin, 2013 [52] | SRMA of PCS | 3 (69,297) | T2D | High consumers had 42% increased risk of T2D (≥1 egg/day vs. <1 egg/week). |
Djoussé, 2016 [65] | SRMA of PCS | 12 (219,979) | T2D | High consumers had 9% increased risk of developing T2D. DR analysis: elevated risk of 7% only when >5 eggs/week consumed. |
Tamez, 2016 [66] | SRMA of PCS | 10 (251,213) | T2D | DR analysis: each additional egg per day associated with 13% higher risk of T2D. |
Drouin-Chartier, 2020 [67] | SRMA of PCS | 16 (589,559) | T2D | DR analysis: each additional egg per day associated with 7% higher risk of T2D. |
Djoussé, 2021 [63] | Pooled analysis and MA of PCS | 9 (103,811) | T2D | No association with T2D risk at 1 egg/week ≥2 eggs/week associated with increased risk (11–27% depending on intake) vs. zero intake. |
Author, Year | Study Design | Intervention | Number of Participants | Outcomes | Results |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ratliff, 2010 [77] | RCT, crossover | Egg breakfast vs. bagel breakfast | 21 men (20–70 y) | Satiety, appetite hormones, EI | EI at lunch (−112 kcal) and over 24 h (−403 kcal) significantly lower after eggs Vs. bagel. Serum ghrelin and hunger scores significantly lower and satiety scores higher after eggs vs. bagel. |
Pombo-Rodrigues, 2011 [78] | RCT, crossover | Omelette vs. jacket potato vs. chicken lunch | 31 adults (37.5 ± 9.97 y) | Satiety, EI | After eggs, significantly lower desire to eat, greater fullness score and lower desire to eat vs. jacket potato. No significant differences in later EI. |
Fallaize, 2012 [79] | RCT, crossover | Egg breakfast vs. cereal breakfast vs. croissant breakfast | 30 men (21.7 ± 1.2 y) | Satiety, EI | After eggs, increased satiety, less hunger and lower desire to eat vs. cereal or croissant. EI at lunch lower (−158 kcal) after eggs vs. croissant. EI at evening meal lower (−315 kcal) after eggs vs. cereal. |
Liu, 2015 [80] | RCT, crossover | Egg breakfast vs. bagel breakfast | 13 children (5 y) 15 adolescents (15.6 ± 1.1 y) | Satiety, appetite hormones, EI | No differences between test breakfasts for EI or reported appetite ratings for any age group. PYY increased significantly 180 min after eggs compared with bagel in adolescents. |
Fuller, 2015 [81] | SBRCT, parallel | High egg diet (12/week) vs. low egg diet (<2/week) (breakfast matched for protein) for 3 months | 140 adults with T2D (49–69 y) | Satiety | Those on high egg diet reported significantly less hunger and greater satiety post-breakfast compared with low egg diet. |
Bonnema, 2016 [82] | RCT, crossover | 3 test breakfasts: low egg/high fibre vs. high egg/low fibre vs. cereal low protein/low fibre | 48 adults (24 ± 1 y) | Satiety, EI | Reported satiety and satisfaction higher and reported hunger and prospective food intake score lower after high egg breakfasts vs. others. EI at lunch lower after both egg breakfasts compared with cereal breakfast. |
Kral, 2016 [83] | RCT, crossover | Egg vs. cereal vs. oatmeal breakfast | 40 children (8–10 y) | EI, satiety | EI at lunch lower (−70 kcal) after egg breakfast vs. other breakfasts. EI not significant differences between breakfasts for energy consumed over the remainder of the test day or in appetite ratings over time. |
Fuller, 2018 [76] | RCT, parallel | High egg breakfast (12/week) vs. low egg diet (<2/week) + energy restriction, for 3 months | 128 adults at risk of T2D or with confirmed T2D (49–71 y) | Weight | No significant differences in weight loss between high egg vs. low egg diets. |
Zhu, 2022 [84] | RCT, crossover | Egg breakfast vs. cereal breakfast (matched for protein) + energy restriction for 7 d | 60 females (24 ± 4.9 y) | Satiety, appetite hormones, EI | No significant differences in EI or appetite hormones between diet groups. Reported fullness significantly greater after eggs. |
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Myers, M.; Ruxton, C.H.S. Eggs: Healthy or Risky? A Review of Evidence from High Quality Studies on Hen’s Eggs. Nutrients 2023, 15, 2657. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15122657
Myers M, Ruxton CHS. Eggs: Healthy or Risky? A Review of Evidence from High Quality Studies on Hen’s Eggs. Nutrients. 2023; 15(12):2657. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15122657
Chicago/Turabian StyleMyers, Madeleine, and Carrie Helen Stevenson Ruxton. 2023. "Eggs: Healthy or Risky? A Review of Evidence from High Quality Studies on Hen’s Eggs" Nutrients 15, no. 12: 2657. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15122657
APA StyleMyers, M., & Ruxton, C. H. S. (2023). Eggs: Healthy or Risky? A Review of Evidence from High Quality Studies on Hen’s Eggs. Nutrients, 15(12), 2657. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu15122657