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Tier 2 · Peer-reviewed secondarymeta analysisstrongn = 1075

Omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) for type 2 diabetes mellitus

Hartweg J, Perera R, Montori V, Dinneen S, Neil HA, Farmer A · 2008 · Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews

DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD003205.pub2View source ↗

Omega-3 PUFA supplementation in type 2 diabetes lowers triglycerides and VLDL cholesterol, but may raise LDL cholesterol; control of blood sugar levels was not affected by the treatment.

Summary

This is the Cochrane Collaboration's systematic review and meta-analysis of omega-3 PUFA supplementation in adults with type 2 diabetes. Hartweg and colleagues identified 23 randomised controlled trials totalling 1,075 participants, with intervention durations up to 8 months. Omega-3 was compared against vegetable oil or placebo across the included studies. The headline findings: omega-3 supplementation in T2D meaningfully lowered triglycerides and VLDL cholesterol — the primary cardiometabolic risk factors omega-3 was theoretically expected to improve. There was a small possible signal toward higher LDL cholesterol, though the subgroup results did not reach statistical significance. Critically, glycemic control — HbA1c, fasting glucose — was not affected by omega-3 supplementation. No significant adverse effects were reported across the trials. The Cochrane verdict: omega-3 in T2D produces favorable lipid changes but does not lower blood sugar or independently treat diabetes. The intervention is safe; it is not a glycemic therapy.

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Not medical advice. This page summarizes primary research. It is not a substitute for consultation with a qualified clinician. See safety for exclusion criteria.