Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2brh9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-24T06:44:27.383Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Higher PUFA and n-3 PUFA, conjugated linoleic acid, α-tocopherol and iron, but lower iodine and selenium concentrations in organic milk: a systematic literature review and meta- and redundancy analyses

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 February 2016

Dominika Średnicka-Tober
Affiliation:
Nafferton Ecological Farming Group (NEFG), School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development, Newcastle University, Nafferton Farm, Stocksfield, Northumberland NE43 7XD, UK Department of Functional and Organic Food and Commodities, Faculty of Human Nutrition and Consumer Sciences, Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Nowoursynowska 159c, Warsaw 02-776, Poland
Marcin Barański
Affiliation:
Nafferton Ecological Farming Group (NEFG), School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development, Newcastle University, Nafferton Farm, Stocksfield, Northumberland NE43 7XD, UK
Chris J. Seal
Affiliation:
School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development, Human Nutrition Research Centre, Newcastle University, Agriculture Building, Kings Road, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU, UK
Roy Sanderson
Affiliation:
School of Biology, Newcastle University, Ridley Building, Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 7RU, UK
Charles Benbrook
Affiliation:
Benbrook Consulting Services, 90063 Troy Road, Enterprise, OR 97828, USA
Håvard Steinshamn
Affiliation:
Food and Agriculture Division-Grassland and Forage, Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO), Gunnars veg 6, N-6630 Tingvoll, Norway
Joanna Gromadzka-Ostrowska
Affiliation:
Department of Dietetics, Faculty of Human Nutrition and Consumer Sciences, Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Nowoursynowska 159c, Warsaw 02-776, Poland
Ewa Rembiałkowska
Affiliation:
Department of Functional and Organic Food and Commodities, Faculty of Human Nutrition and Consumer Sciences, Warsaw University of Life Sciences, Nowoursynowska 159c, Warsaw 02-776, Poland
Krystyna Skwarło-Sońta
Affiliation:
Department of Animal Physiology, Faculty of Biology, University of Warsaw, Miecznikowa 1, Warsaw 02-096, Poland
Mick Eyre
Affiliation:
Nafferton Ecological Farming Group (NEFG), School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development, Newcastle University, Nafferton Farm, Stocksfield, Northumberland NE43 7XD, UK
Giulio Cozzi
Affiliation:
Department of Animal Medicine, Production and Health, University of Padua, Viale dell’ Università 19, 35020 Legnaro, Italy
Mette Krogh Larsen
Affiliation:
Department of Food Science-Food Chemistry & Technology, Aarhus University, Blichers Allé 20, Building F20/8845, 8830 Tjele, Denmark
Teresa Jordon
Affiliation:
Nafferton Ecological Farming Group (NEFG), School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development, Newcastle University, Nafferton Farm, Stocksfield, Northumberland NE43 7XD, UK
Urs Niggli
Affiliation:
Research Institute for Organic Agriculture (FiBL), Ackerstrasse 113, CH-5070 Frick, Switzerland
Tomasz Sakowski
Affiliation:
Institute of Genetics and Animal Breeding, Polish Academy of Science, Jastrzębiec, Postępu 36, Magdalenka 05-552, Poland
Philip C. Calder
Affiliation:
Human Development and Health Academic Unit, Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton SO16 6YD, UK
Graham C. Burdge
Affiliation:
Human Development and Health Academic Unit, Faculty of Medicine, University of Southampton, Southampton SO16 6YD, UK
Smaragda Sotiraki
Affiliation:
National Agricultural Research Foundation (NAGREF), Veterinary Research Institute of Thessaloniki, Thermi 57001, Thessaloniki, Greece
Alexandros Stefanakis
Affiliation:
National Agricultural Research Foundation (NAGREF), Veterinary Research Institute of Thessaloniki, Thermi 57001, Thessaloniki, Greece
Sokratis Stergiadis
Affiliation:
Nafferton Ecological Farming Group (NEFG), School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development, Newcastle University, Nafferton Farm, Stocksfield, Northumberland NE43 7XD, UK School of Agriculture, Policy and Development, Centre for Dairy Research, Food Production and Quality Division, University of Reading, PO Box 237, Earley Gate, Reading RG6 6AR, UK
Halil Yolcu
Affiliation:
Nafferton Ecological Farming Group (NEFG), School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development, Newcastle University, Nafferton Farm, Stocksfield, Northumberland NE43 7XD, UK Kelkit Aydin Vocational Training School, Gumushane University, 29600 Kelkit, Gumushane, Turkey
Eleni Chatzidimitriou
Affiliation:
Nafferton Ecological Farming Group (NEFG), School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development, Newcastle University, Nafferton Farm, Stocksfield, Northumberland NE43 7XD, UK
Gillian Butler
Affiliation:
Nafferton Ecological Farming Group (NEFG), School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development, Newcastle University, Nafferton Farm, Stocksfield, Northumberland NE43 7XD, UK
Gavin Stewart
Affiliation:
Nafferton Ecological Farming Group (NEFG), School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development, Newcastle University, Nafferton Farm, Stocksfield, Northumberland NE43 7XD, UK
Carlo Leifert*
Affiliation:
Nafferton Ecological Farming Group (NEFG), School of Agriculture, Food and Rural Development, Newcastle University, Nafferton Farm, Stocksfield, Northumberland NE43 7XD, UK
*
*Corresponding author: Professor C. Leifert, fax +44 1661 831 006, email [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Demand for organic milk is partially driven by consumer perceptions that it is more nutritious. However, there is still considerable uncertainty over whether the use of organic production standards affects milk quality. Here we report results of meta-analyses based on 170 published studies comparing the nutrient content of organic and conventional bovine milk. There were no significant differences in total SFA and MUFA concentrations between organic and conventional milk. However, concentrations of total PUFA and n-3 PUFA were significantly higher in organic milk, by an estimated 7 (95 % CI −1, 15) % and 56 (95 % CI 38, 74) %, respectively. Concentrations of α-linolenic acid (ALA), very long-chain n-3 fatty acids (EPA+DPA+DHA) and conjugated linoleic acid were also significantly higher in organic milk, by an 69 (95 % CI 53, 84) %, 57 (95 % CI 27, 87) % and 41 (95 % CI 14, 68) %, respectively. As there were no significant differences in total n-6 PUFA and linoleic acid (LA) concentrations, the n-6:n-3 and LA:ALA ratios were lower in organic milk, by an estimated 71 (95 % CI −122, −20) % and 93 (95 % CI −116, −70) %. It is concluded that organic bovine milk has a more desirable fatty acid composition than conventional milk. Meta-analyses also showed that organic milk has significantly higher α-tocopherol and Fe, but lower I and Se concentrations. Redundancy analysis of data from a large cross-European milk quality survey indicates that the higher grazing/conserved forage intakes in organic systems were the main reason for milk composition differences.

Type
Full Papers
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2016

The demand for organic dairy products has increased rapidly over the past 20 years( Reference Willer and Kilcher 1 ). Dairy products currently account for 15 % of the total organic food market in the USA and up to 30 % in some European countries( Reference Schultz and Huntrods 2 , 3 ). A main driver for the increase in demand has been the consumer perception that organic milk and dairy products typically contain higher concentrations of nutritionally desirable compounds, therefore making them ‘healthier’( Reference Yiridoe, Bonti-Ankomah and Martin 4 , Reference Oughton and Ritson 5 ). There is also concern among consumers about pesticide residues in milk( Reference Mallatou, Pappas and Kondyli 6 Reference Melgar, Santaeufemia and García 8 ), although regulatory bodies in Europe maintain that there is no risk from pesticide residues in food( 9 ). However, there is still considerable uncertainty over whether, and to what extent, the use of organic production standards results in significant changes in the nutritional quality of milk and dairy products( Reference Oughton and Ritson 5 , Reference Dangour, Dodhia and Hayter 10 Reference Cooper, Niggli and Leifert 12 ).

Over the past 20 years, a large number of scientific studies have compared concentrations of nutritionally relevant compounds in milk from organic and conventional dairy production systems. Most of them focused on comparing milk fat composition, but there are also some published data on antioxidant, vitamin and/or mineral concentrations in milk and dairy products( Reference Dangour, Dodhia and Hayter 10 , Reference Palupi, Jayanegara and Ploeger 13 , Reference Smith-Spangler, Brandeau and Hunter 14 ). There has been a particular interest in comparing concentrations of nutritionally relevant, SFA, MUFA and PUFA. It is well documented that SFA and in particular myristic acid (14 : 0) and palmitic acid (16 : 0), and possibly also lauric acid (12 : 0), affect the relative proportions of HDL- and LDL-cholesterol and increase the risk of CVD in humans( Reference Hu, Manson and Willett 15 ). SFA in milk are therefore widely considered to have negative effects on human health( Reference Hu, Manson and Willett 15 ), although this is not universally accepted( Reference Parodi 16 Reference Kliem and Givens 18 ). In contrast, the PUFA linoleic acid (LA) and α-linolenic acid (ALA), EPA, DPA and DHA have been shown to induce protective effects against CVD( Reference Sun, Ma and Campos 19 ). LA is known to reduce LDL production and enhance its clearance, whereas EPA and DHA reduce arrhythmia, blood pressure, platelet sensitivity, inflammation and serum TAG levels( Reference Sun, Ma and Campos 19 ).

Increased intakes of very long-chain (VLC) n-3 PUFA (EPA+DPA+DHA) have also been linked to other health benefits, including improved fetal brain development and function, delayed decline in cognitive function in elderly men and reduced risk of dementia (especially Alzheimer’s disease)( Reference Ruxton, Reed and Simpson 20 ).

The PUFA conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) has been linked to anti-obesity, anti-carcinogenic, anti-atherogenic, anti-hypertension, anti-adipogenic and anti-diabetogenic effects, as well as improved immune system function and bone formation. However, most evidence for potential positive health impacts of CLA is from in vitro or animal studies, and there is considerable controversy over whether, and to what extent, increasing CLA intake will result in health benefits in humans( Reference Belury 21 Reference Bhattacharya, Banu and Rahman 25 ).

Three previous systematic literature reviews( Reference Dangour, Dodhia and Hayter 10 , Reference Palupi, Jayanegara and Ploeger 13 , Reference Smith-Spangler, Brandeau and Hunter 14 ) used meta-analyses methods to synthesise published information on composition differences between organic and conventional milk and/or dairy products, but report contrasting results and conclusions (see the online Supplementary data for a detailed description and discussion of the results of previous meta-analyses). As a result, they contributed substantially to the existing uncertainty about the impact of organic production methods on the nutritional composition of milk and dairy products. All three systematic reviews/meta-analyses were based on only a small proportion (<20 %) of the information published to date, limiting the statistical power of the meta-analyses, especially for parameters in which the number of data sets available was relatively small( Reference Brandt, Średnicka-Tober and Barański 26 ). Results from two recent large milk quality surveys from the European Union and USA( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Larsen 27 , Reference Benbrook, Butler and Latif 28 ) indicated that there is significant regional variation in the relative differences in fatty acid (FA) composition between organic and conventional milk, which may also reduce the statistical power of meta-analyses.

There has also been a recent qualitative literature review( Reference Schwendel, Wester and Morel 29 ) that discussed composition differences between organic and conventional milk reported in selected studies in the context of experiments focused on identifying the effect of management practices on milk composition.

Although meta-analyses of published comparative studies may quantify potential composition differences between organic and conventional dairy products, they cannot identify the contribution of specific agronomic drivers – for example animal diet, breed choice and other management parameters – used in organic and conventional livestock production. This is mainly because in most comparative studies the management practices used in both organic and conventional production systems are described in insufficient detail( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Slots 30 , Reference Butler, Nielsen and Larsen 27 ). However, for the dairy sector, there are now five publications reporting data from a large cross-European milk quality survey in which bovine milk composition parameters and management practices, including breeds used, feeding regimens and milking systems, were recorded using common methods( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Larsen 27 , Reference Butler, Nielsen and Slots 30 Reference Stergiadis, Leifert and Seal 34 ). This unique data set allows, for the first time, the main agronomic drivers for differences in milk composition between organic and conventional farming systems to be investigated by redundancy analysis (RDA).

Therefore, the main objectives of the present study were to (1) carry out a systematic literature review of all available studies published before March 2014 that focused on quantifying composition differences between organic and conventional milk and dairy products; (2) conduct weighted and unweighted meta-analyses (WM and UM) of the published data; (3) carry out sensitivity analyses focused on identifying to what extent meta-analysis results are affected by data extraction (e.g. using data reported for different years/seasons as separate events or means of data from different years/seasons) or inclusion criteria (e.g. including or excluding comparisons involving milk composition data from non-standard conventional or organic systems; excluding data from the 20 % of studies with the least precise treatment effects, those having the largest variances identified in WM); and (4) perform redundancy and correlation analyses using data from a large cross-European farm survey( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Larsen 27 , Reference Butler, Nielsen and Slots 30 Reference Stergiadis, Leifert and Seal 34 ) of dairy cow management, milk yield and quality parameters to identify management parameters associated with differences in composition between organic and conventional milk and associations between productivity and milk quality in organic and conventional dairy systems.

Methods

Data acquisition: literature search strategy and inclusion criteria

The review methods were described in detail in a previously published meta-analysis by Barański et al.( Reference Barański, Średnicka-Tober and Volakakis 35 ), which assessed composition differences between organic and conventional crops. Relevant publications were identified through an initial search of literature in the Web of Knowledge, Scopus, Ovid and EBSCO databases using the search terms (organic* or ecologic* or biodynamic*) and (conventional* or integrated) and (livestock or dairy or milk or cheese or cream or curd or butter or yoghurt) (Fig. 1).

Fig. 1 Summary of the search and selection protocols used to identify papers included in the systematic review and the meta-analyses. * Review carried out by one reviewer; † data extraction carried out by two reviewers. CF, comparison of matched farms; BS, basket studies; EX, controlled experiments.

Papers in all languages, published in peer-reviewed and non-peer-reviewed journals reporting data on both desirable and undesirable compositional parameters, were considered relevant for inclusion in the meta-analyses. The search was restricted to the period between 1992 (the year when legally binding organic farming regulations were first introduced in the European Union) and the end of the project in March 2014 and provided 15 164 references. An additional thirty-one publications were found by studying lists of references or directly contacting authors of published papers and reviews identified in the initial literature search (Fig. 1). This included suitable data from scientific papers published before 1992 that were identified/used in previous systematic literature reviews/meta-analyses( Reference Dangour, Dodhia and Hayter 10 , Reference Smith-Spangler, Brandeau and Hunter 14 ).

The abstracts of all publications were then examined by two reviewers to determine whether they contained original data on milk or dairy products (appropriate population) obtained by comparing composition parameters in organic and conventional system (appropriate comparators). This identified 440 suitable publications, from which 244 were subsequently rejected, because they did not meet inclusion criteria or reported duplicated information.

Publications were eligible for inclusion if data for milk yield and/or at least one composition parameter in milk or dairy products were reported. As a result, 196 publications (177 peer-reviewed) were selected for data extraction (170 on bovine milk, nineteen on bovine dairy products, eleven on sheep milk and dairy products, nine on goat milk and dairy products, two on buffalo milk and dairy products). Data from eighty-nine publications (seventy-nine peer-reviewed) fulfilled the criteria for inclusion in random-effects WM. Because of the limited data available for sheep, goat and buffalo milk and dairy products, only data for bovine milk were included in meta-analyses presented in the main paper. Results from meta-analyses of pooled data for goat, sheep and buffalo milk, which was possible for only a small number of composition parameters, are presented in the Supplementary Information only (online Supplementary Fig. S35).

Previous systematic reviews/meta-analyses of comparative studies into milk quality by Dangour et al. ( Reference Dangour, Dodhia and Hayter 10 ), Palupi et al. ( Reference Palupi, Jayanegara and Ploeger 13 ) and Smith-Spangler et al.( Reference Smith-Spangler, Brandeau and Hunter 14 ) were based on a more limited proportion of the literature available (twelve, thirteen and thirty-seven publications, respectively). However, most publications included in these previous reviews were also used in the standard WM reported here, except for one publication on sheep and goats milk included by Palupi et al. ( Reference Palupi, Jayanegara and Ploeger 13 ) and one publication on milk included by Dangour et al. ( Reference Dangour, Dodhia and Hayter 10 ) that reported the same data as other publications selected for extraction in this study.

A Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) flow diagram illustrates the search and study inclusion strategies (Fig. 1). Eligibility assessment was performed by two independent reviewers, with discrepancies resolved by consensus and reference to a third reviewer as necessary.

Data extraction

Data were extracted from three types of studies: (1) comparisons of matched farms (CF), farm surveys in which milk was obtained from organic and conventional farms in the same country or region; (2) basket studies (BS), retail product surveys in which organic and conventional milk was obtained in retail outlets; and (3) controlled experiments (EX) in which milk was obtained from experimental animals managed according to organic or conventional farming standards/protocols. Data from the three study types were subject to meta-analysis if the authors stated that (1) organic farms included in farm surveys were using organic farming methods; (2) organic milk collected in retail surveys were labelled as organic; or (3) animals from organically reared herds used in EX were managed according to organic farming standards, even if animals and land used for ‘organic treatments’ in experiments were not organically certified.

Several studies compared more than one organic or conventional system or treatment (online Supplementary Table S3). For example, additional conventional systems/treatments were described as ‘low input’, ‘intensive’ or ‘extensive’, and an additional organic system/treatment included in some studies was described as ‘biodynamic’. In such cases, only the organic and conventional system identified by the authors as closest to the typical, contemporary organic/conventional farming system was used in the meta-analysis, as recommended by Brandt et al. ( Reference Brandt, Leifert and Sanderson 11 ). Full references of the publications and summary descriptions of studies included in the meta-analyses are given in the online Supplementary Tables S1–S3.

Information and data were extracted from all selected publications and compiled in a Microsoft Access database. The database will be made freely available on the Newcastle University website (http://research.ncl.ac.uk/nefg/QOF) for use and scrutiny by others. A list of the information extracted from publications and recorded in the database is given in the online Supplementary Table S4.

Data reported as numerical values in the text or tables were copied directly into the database. Results only published in graphical form were enlarged, printed, measured (using a ruler) and then entered into the database, as previously described( Reference Barański, Średnicka-Tober and Volakakis 35 ).

Data reported in the same publication for different study types, countries and outcomes were treated as independent effects. However, data extracted from the same publication for (1) different years and (2) different regions, retail outlets or brands in the same country or (3) multiple time points within the same sampling year were averaged before use in the meta-analyses.

Risk of bias of individual studies was based on (1) study type and probability of confounding, (2) production system and magnitude of effect.

Two independent reviewers assessed publications for eligibility and extracted data. Discrepancies were detected for approximately 4 % of the data, and in these cases extraction was repeated following discussion.

Raw data from a previously published large cross-European farm survey( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Larsen 27 , Reference Butler, Nielsen and Slots 30 Reference Stergiadis, Leifert and Seal 34 ) were obtained directly from the authors and used in both the meta-analyses and RDA; this included some data sets (e.g. for individual SFA or carotenoids) that were not previously reported( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Larsen 27 , Reference Butler, Nielsen and Slots 30 Reference Stergiadis, Leifert and Seal 34 ).

Study characteristics, summaries of methods used for sensitivity analyses and ancillary information are given in the online Supplementary Tables S2–S7. They include information on (1) the number of papers from different countries and publication years used in meta-analyses (online Supplementary Fig. S1 and S2); (2) study type and locations identified in different studies (online Supplementary Table S2); (3) production system information for studies with more than two systems (online Supplementary Table S3); (4) the type of information extracted from papers (online Supplementary Table S4); (5) data-handling and inclusion criteria, and meta-analysis methods used in sensitivity analyses (online Supplementary Table S5); (6) the list of composition parameters included in meta-analyses (online Supplementary Table S6); and (7) the list of composition parameters for which meta-analyses were not possible (n<3) (online Supplementary Table S7).

The online Supplementary Table S8 summarises basic statistics on the number of studies, individual comparisons, organic and conventional samples sizes, and comparisons showing statistically or numerically higher concentrations in organic or conventional milk samples for the composition parameters included in Fig. 2 and 3.

Fig. 2 Results of the standard meta-analyses and sensitivity analysis 1 for fat composition in cows’ milk. * Numerical values for mean percentage difference (MPD) and 95 % CI are given in the online Supplementary Table S9. † Significantly different between organic samples (ORG) and conventional samples (CONV) (P<0·05). ‡ Heterogeneity and the I 2 statistic. § Ln ratio=Ln(ORG/CONV×100 %). || Calculated based on published fatty acid (FA) composition data. , MPD calculated using data included in sensitivity analysis 1; , MPD calculated using data included in standard meta-analysis; , standardised mean difference (smd) from the standard meta-analysis with 95 % CI represented by horizontal bars. n, number of data points included in meta-analyses; OA, oleic acid; VA, vaccenic acid; CLA, conjugated linoleic acid; ALA, α-linolenic acid; VLC n-3 PUFA, very long-chain n-3 PUFA (EPA+DPA+DHA); LA, linoleic acid; AA, arachidonic acid.

Fig. 3 Results of the standard meta-analyses and sensitivity analysis 1 for antioxidants, minerals, urea and somatic cell count (SCC) in cows’ milk. * Numerical values for mean percentage difference (MPD) and 95 % CI are given in the online Supplementary Table S9. † Significantly different between organic samples (ORG) and conventional samples (CONV) (P<0·05). ‡ Heterogeneity and the I 2 statistic. § Ln ratio=Ln(ORG/CONV×100 %). || Calculated based on published fatty acid composition data. , MPD calculated using data included in sensitivity analysis 1; , MPD calculated using data included in standard meta-analysis; , standardised mean difference (smd) from the standard meta-analysis with 95 % CI represented by horizontal bars; n, number of data points included in meta-analyses.

Meta-analyses

Nine analyses were undertaken (online Supplementary Table S5). The methods used for random-effects WM and UM sensitivity analyses 1 were described by Barański et al.( Reference Barański, Średnicka-Tober and Volakakis 35 ) and compared only pragmatically chosen standard organic and conventional systems. Fig. 2 and 3 show the pooled effects obtained using random-effects meta-analysis weighted by inverse variance and a common random-effects variance component and unweighted analysis of differences in means. The WM analysis is the primary analysis, but it is useful to augment the results with UM (particularly to explore the impact of including data from the studies that do not report measures of variance and thus a wider range of studies).

Eight sensitivity analyses were carried out (online Supplementary Table S5). Four analyses (sensitivity analyses 2, 3, 6 and 7; online Supplementary Table S5) were designed to identify whether inclusion of data for individual experimental years as separate data points affected the results of meta-analyses. Four analyses (sensitivity analysis 4–7; online Supplementary Table S5) were carried out to identify whether exclusion of data for comparisons with non-standard organic or conventional systems affected the results of meta-analyses; in these analyses, comparative data for all organic and conventional production systems reported by authors were included (online Supplementary Table S3). In sensitivity analysis 8 we explored the effect of excluding 20 % of studies with the least precise treatment effects from the WM. Results of these sensitivity analyses are available in the appendix on the Newcastle University website (http://research.ncl.ac.uk/nefg/QOF).

Effect sizes for all WM were based on standardised mean differences (smd), as recommended for studies that include data measuring the same parameters on different scales( Reference Stewart 36 , Reference Koricheva and Gurevitch 37 ).

Both WM and UM were carried out using the R statistical programming environment (http://www.r-project.org/). WM, with the smd as the basic response variable, were conducted using standard methods and the open-source ‘metafor’ statistical package( Reference Viechtbauer 38 Reference Lipsey and Wilson 41 ). A detailed description of the methods and calculations is provided in the ‘Additional Methods Description’ published by Barański et al. ( Reference Barański, Średnicka-Tober and Volakakis 35 ) (available online).

A positive smd value indicates that mean concentrations of the observed constituents were greater in the organic milk samples, whereas a negative smd indicates that mean concentrations were higher in conventional (non-organic) samples. The statistical significance of a reported effect size (i.e. smd tot) and CI were estimated based on standard methods( Reference Hedges, Gurevitch and Curtis 42 ) using ‘metafor’( Reference Viechtbauer 38 ). The influence of study type (CF, EX, BS) as a potential moderator was tested using mixed-effect models( Reference Mengersen, Schmidt and Jennions 43 ) and subgroup analyses (online Supplementary Fig. 3–33).

We carried out tests of homogeneity (Q statistics and I 2 statistics) on all summary effect sizes. Homogeneity was indicated if I 2 was <25 % and the P value for the Q statistics was >0·010. Funnel plots, Egger tests of funnel plot asymmetry and fail-safe number tests were used to assess publication bias( Reference Rothstein 44 ) (see the online Supplementary Table S13 for further information).

For the UM, the ratio of organic means:conventional means ( O /X̅ C) expressed as a percentage was ln-transformed, and values were used to determine whether the arithmetic average of the ln-transformed ratios was significantly greater than ln(100), using resampling( Reference Gurevitch and Hedges 45 ). Reported P values were derived from Fisher’s one-sample randomisation test( Reference Manly 46 ), and a P<0·05 was considered statistically significant.

For parameters that were calculated based on published information (total VLC n-3 PUFA, LA:ALA ratio), it was only possible to carry out UM (Fig. 2), as measures of variance were not available.

Forest plots were constructed to show pooled smd and corresponding 95 % CI for all compositional parameters investigated. Additional forest plots were presented for selected results to illustrate heterogeneity between individual studies and study types (see the online Supplementary Fig. 3–33).

The mean percentage difference (MPD) was calculated for all parameters for which statistically significant effects were detected by either UM or WM. This was done to facilitate value judgements regarding the biological importance of the relative effect magnitudes using the calculations described by Barański et al.( Reference Barański, Średnicka-Tober and Volakakis 35 ).

We also calculated MPD using data-pairs included in the UM and WM, to estimate the impact of excluding data, for which no measures of variance were reported, on the magnitude of difference. As the MPD can be expressed as ‘% higher’ in conventional or organic milk, they provide estimates for the magnitude of composition differences that are easier to relate to existing information on potential health impacts of changing dietary intakes for individual or groups of compounds than the smd values. The 95 % CI for MPD were estimated using a standard method( Reference Hedges, Gurevitch and Curtis 42 ).

An overall assessment of the strength of evidence was made using an adaptation of the Grading of Recommendation Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE)( Reference Guyatt, Oxman and Vist 47 ) system (Table 1).

Table 1 Grading of Recommendation Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) assessment of the strength of evidence for standard meta-analysis for parameters shown in Fig. 2 and 3 (Standardised mean difference values (smd) and 95 % confidence intervals)

OA, oleic acid; VA, vaccenic acid; CLA, conjugated linoleic acid; FA, fatty acids; ALA, α-linolenic acid; VLC n-3 PUFA, very long-chain n-3 PUFA (EPA+DPA+DHA); LA, linoleic acid; AA, arachidonic acid.

* Study quality was considered low because of high risks of bias and potential for confounding. However, we considered large effects to mitigate this sensu GRADE; large effects were defined as >20 %, moderate effects 10–20 and small <10 %.

Inconsistency was based on the measure of heterogeneity and consistency of effect direction sensu GRADE.

Precision was based on the width of the pooled effect CI and the extent of overlap in substantive interpretation of effect magnitude sensu GRADE.

§ Publication bias was assessed using visual inspection of funnel plots, the Egger tests, two tests of fail-safe n, and trim and fill (see the online Supplementary Table 13). Overall publication bias was considered high when indicated by two or more methods, moderate when indicated by one method and low when no methods suggested publication bias.

|| Overall quality of evidence was then assessed across domains as in standard GRADE appraisal; high when there was very high confidence that the true effects lie close to that of estimate, moderate when there was moderate confidence in effect estimate and the true effect is likely to be close to the estimate but there is a possibility that it is substantially different, low when the confidence in the effect estimate was limited and the true effect may be substantially different from the estimate, very low when there was very little confidence in the effect estimate and the true effect is likely to be substantially different from the estimate.

Calculated based on published fatty acid composition data.

Estimation of n-3 fatty acid and conjugated linoleic acid intakes

FA intakes were calculated using the following formula: total fat intake from milk×proportion of specific FA (n-3 PUFA, ALA, EPA, DHA, CLA) in total milk FA×0·933 (the proportion of FA in total milk lipids)( Reference Glasser, Doreau and Ferlay 48 ). To estimate the effect of switching from conventional to organic milk/dairy products, estimated dietary intakes of ALA and EPA+DHA from dairy products were compared with European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) recommended intakes of 1100 and 250 mg/d, respectively( 49 ). EFSA recommendations for ALA intake, given relative to total energy intake, were transformed into mg/d, assuming average dietary energy intakes of 8·4 MJ/d (2000 kcal/d)( Reference Anderson 50 ) and FA energy content of 37·7 kJ/g (9 kcal/g)( Reference Akoh 51 ).

Redundancy analyses

The relationships between feeding/management practices and breed index (proportion of Holstein Friesian cows in the herd) and the nutritional composition of milk were investigated using published data from extensive cross-European dairy farm and milk quality surveys( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Larsen 27 , Reference Butler, Nielsen and Slots 30 Reference Stergiadis, Leifert and Seal 34 ). RDA were carried out using the CANOCO statistical package( Reference CJFt and Smilauer 52 ). The importance of individual factors (breed index, feed composition parameters and milking system) was assessed using automatic forward selection within RDA, with no interaction terms, using Monte Carlo permutation tests (9999 permutations for each randomisation test). Organic and conventional production practices were included as passive drivers in the RDA carried out to produce the bi-plot in Fig. 5.

A number of conventional farms included in the cross-European farm and milk quality survey used low-input (low concentrate, high-grazing-based forage intake) feeding regimens that conform to organic production standards. We therefore carried out a separate RDA in which high- and low-input conventional and organic production practice were used as separate drivers, to test whether associations between milk composition, and organic and low-input, and conventional feeding practices were similar (online Supplementary Fig. S34).

Results

Characteristics of studies/data included in meta-analyses

Analyses were based on data from 196 publications reporting results from farm surveys (127 papers), EX (twenty-two papers), BS (fifty-one papers) or results from more than one type of study (EX, CF and/or BS) (online Supplementary Table S2).

Approximately 76 % of studies included in meta-analyses were from Europe, mainly from Germany, Sweden, Denmark, UK, Italy and Norway, with most of the balance coming from the USA and Brazil (online Supplementary Table S2 and Fig. S2). A total of 187 studies reported composition data on fresh milk, whereas a smaller number of papers reported data for cheese (thirteen papers), yoghurt (four papers), fermented milk (three papers), curd (one paper) and butter (four papers) (online Supplementary Table S2). Only studies reporting data on fresh milk were included in meta-analyses.

Publications reported data on 418 different composition parameters in fresh milk and dairy products, of which 120 were included in meta-analyses (online Supplementary Tables S6 and S7).

Studies were universally judged to be at high/unclear risk of bias as a result of poor reporting. Insufficient detail was provided to assess probability of confounding as a source of heterogeneity (online Supplementary Table S2). The impact of the production system on the effect magnitude was ascertained where data were available using RDA (Fig. 5), but insufficient detail was reported in the majority of individual studies resulting in high/unclear risk of bias. However, country and production system did explain heterogeneity in meta-regressions, which may be related to risk of bias (Fig. 4). Overall risk of bias was considered high, but this was mitigated by large effect magnitudes for fourteen of thirty-one outcomes (Table 1).

Fig. 4 Summary of data presented in papers included in the standard meta-analysis for concentration of (a) total conjugated linoleic acid (CLA), (b) n-3 fatty acids (FA) and (c) PUFA content in cows’ milk. Values are means with, their standard errors for conventional () and organic () production system. Significant correlation: * P≤0·05; ** P≤0·01; *** P≤0·001; NS not significant; NR not reported. On x-axis country code according ISO 3166-2 (see http://www.iso.org/iso/home/standards/country_codes.htm) and study ID in parentheses (see the online Supplementary Table S1 for references). † Paper not included in standard meta-analysis for which values for measures of variance were obtained directly from authors.

Milk yield per cow

WM showed that the average milk yield (kg milk/cow per d or kg milk/lactation) was significantly lower in organic (−23; 95 % CI −31, −15 %) compared with conventional production systems (Fig. 2; online Supplementary Table S9 and Fig. S3). However, no significant effect of production system was detected for the fat and protein content of milk. Total milk protein and fat yield per cow were therefore also estimated to be approximately 20 % lower for organic herds (online Supplementary Table S11).

Composition of organic and conventional bovine milk

Fatty acid composition

For FA composition, a substantial evidence base (number of comparisons) was available and for most nutritionally relevant parameters more than ten comparative data-pairs were available for WM. The main exceptions were CLA (trans-10-cis-12-18 : 2), the VLC n-3 PUFA (EPA+DPA+DHA) and arachidonic acid (AA) for which less than eight data-pairs were available for WM (Fig. 2).

WM showed that organic and conventional milk had similar concentrations of total SFA and MUFA, but detected significantly higher concentrations of total PUFA in organic milk with an MPD of 7·3 (95 % CI −0·7, 15) %.

Among the PUFA, the largest differences were found for n-3 PUFA. WM detected significantly higher concentrations of total n-3 PUFA, ALA, EPA and DPA, in organic compared with conventional milk (Fig. 2). The MPD was 56 (95 % CI 38, 74) % for total n-3 PUFA, 68 (95 % CI 53, 84) % for ALA, 67 (95 % CI 32, 102) % for EPA, 45 (95 % CI 18, 71) % for DPA and 21 (95 % CI −3, 47) % for DHA (Fig. 2; online Supplementary Table S9).

WM also detected significantly higher total CLA (all CLA isomers) and CLA9 (cis-9,trans-11-18 : 2; the dominant CLA isomer found in milk) and vaccenic acid (VA, a MUFA metabolised to CLA9 by mammals, including humans) in organic milk (Fig. 2). The MPD were 41 (95 % CI 14, 68) % for total CLA, 24 (95 % CI 8, 39) % for CLA9 and 66 (95 % CI 20, 112) % for VA (Fig. 2; online Supplementary Table S9).

In contrast, no significant differences in the concentration of total n-6 PUFA and LA (the dominant n-6 FA found in milk) were found between organic and conventional milk (Fig. 2). However, WM detected significantly lower concentrations of the n-6 PUFA AA (another n-6 FA) in organic milk (Fig. 2). The LA:ALA and n-6:n-3 PUFA ratios were therefore significantly lower in organic compared with conventional milk (Fig. 2).

The LA:ALA ratio was 2·8 (95 % CI 2·0, 3·6) % in organic and 5·0 (95 % CI 1·1, 23·1) % in conventional milk and the n-6:n-3 ratio was 3·6 (95 % CI 1·9, 5·2) % in organic and 5·4 (95 % CI 3·4, 7·4) % in conventional milk (Fig. 2; online Supplementary Table S9).

UM (sensitivity analysis 1 carried out to assess the impact of including data from a larger number of studies) gave very similar results to WM (Fig. 2). UM was also carried out for total VLC n-3 PUFA (EPA+DPA+DHA) and detected significantly higher concentrations in organic milk with an MPD of 57 (95 % CI 27, 87) %.

For a range of specific SFA, MUFA and PUFA and other FA groups, WM did not detect significant differences, and this included 4 : 0 (butyric acid), 6 : 0 (caproic acid), 10 : 0 (capric acid), 13 : 0 (tridecylic acid), 18 : 0 (stearic acid), 12 : 0+14 : 0+16 : 0 (unsaturated fatty acids), 18 : 1, 18 : 2, 18 : 3, 10 : 1 (4-cis-decenoic acid), 12 : 1 (lauroleic acid), 14 : 1 (myristoleic acid), 16 : 1 (palmitoleic acid), 17 : 1 (heptadecenoic acid), cis-11-18 : 1 (cis-VA), cis-12-18 : 1, cis-13-18 : 1, trans-9-18 : 1 (elaidic acid), trans-12-18 : 1, trans-6-8-18 : 1, CLA (trans-7,9-18 : 2), CLA (trans-9,11-18 : 2), CLA (trans-11,13-18 : 2), CLA (trans-12,14-18 : 2), cis-11,14-20 : 2, eicosatrienoic acid (cis-11,14,17-20 : 3), long-chain FA, medium-chain FA and SCFA (online Supplementary Table S12).

Results of the unweighted sensitivity analysis 1 (UM) were broadly similar, but UM also detected significantly lower 16 : 0 and AA concentrations, significantly higher CLA (trans-10-cis-12-18 : 2) and total VLC n-3 PUFA (EPA+DPA+DHA) and a lower LA:ALA ratio in organic milk (Fig. 2).

Antioxidants/vitamins and minerals

The available evidence base for antioxidants/vitamins and minerals was smaller than for FA composition. With the exception of α-tocopherol, β-carotene, I and Fe (for which nine, seven, six and eight data-pairs were available for WM, respectively), the number of data-pairs available for WM was five or less (Fig. 3).

WM detected slightly, but significantly, higher α-tocopherol and Fe concentrations, but lower I and Se concentrations in organic compared with conventional milk (Fig. 3). The MPD was 13 (95 % CI 1, 26) % for α-tocopherol, 20 (95 % CI 0, 41) % for Fe, −74 (95 % CI −115, −33) % for I and −21 (95 % CI −49, 6) % for Se (Fig. 3; online Supplementary Table S9).

Results obtained by UM were broadly similar to those of the standard WM, but UM did detect significantly higher zeaxanthin concentrations in organic milk, but did not detect a significant difference for Fe (Fig. 3).

For a range of other vitamins/antioxidants and minerals, both WM and UM did not detect significant differences, including vitamin A, C, D3, vitamin E activity, Ca, Co, Cu, Mg, Mn, Mo, P, K, Na and Zn, as well as the toxic metals Ca and Pb, but the number of data-pairs available was low for most of these parameters (online Supplementary Tables S11 and S12).

Urea and somatic cell counts

For urea and somatic cell counts (SCC), a more substantial evidence base (seven and twenty-five data-pairs, respectively) was available for WM (Fig. 3). No significant differences in urea and SCC between organic and conventional milk could be detected (Fig. 3).

Composition of organic and conventional sheep, goat and buffalo milk

There are currently very few published studies that report comparative yield (n 5) and/or composition data (n 3 or 4) for sheep, goat and/or buffalo milk. This makes it impossible to carry out accurate quantitative estimates of composition differences by meta-analysis. However, for parameters for which sufficient data (n≥3) were available, we carried out WM to test whether there may be similar trends to those detected for bovine milk (online Supplementary Fig. S35). When pooled data for sheep, goat and buffalo milk were compared by WM, no significant difference in milk yield per animal, PUFA and VA concentrations and SCC were detected. However, significantly higher concentrations of MUFA, CLA9 and ALA, and significantly lower concentrations of LA in organic milk, were detected and there was a trend (P=0·09) towards higher PUFA concentrations in organic milk.

Effects of country/geographic region, study type and other sources of variation

Comparison of concentrations of total PUFA, n-3 PUFA and CLA in organic and conventional bovine milk from different countries/geographic regions showed considerable variation between countries (and in some cases also between different studies from the same country) (Fig. 4).

Heterogeneity was high (I 2>75 %) for approximately two-thirds of bovine milk composition parameters included in WM (nineteen of the thirty-one parameters shown in Fig. 2 and 3), with I 2 ranging from 98 % for lauric acid to 81 % for MUFA. On the other hand, for approximately one-third of composition parameters (twelve of the thirty-one parameters shown in Fig. 2 and 3), low or moderate heterogeneity was detected with I 2 ranging from 0 % for Fe and Se to 72 % for SFA (Fig. 2 and 3).

No substantive funnel plot asymmetry was detected for any parameters shown in Fig. 2 and 3, except for milk yield, palmitic acid, MUFA and AA, for which strong funnel plot asymmetry consistent with a publication bias was detected. However, it is not possible to definitively attribute discrepancies between large, precise studies and small imprecise studies to publication bias, which is strongly suspected, rather than detected, where asymmetry is severe (Table 1; online Supplementary Table S13).

When meta-analysis results obtained from different study types (BS, CF, EX) were compared, broadly similar results were obtained for most composition parameters included in Fig. 2 (online Supplementary Fig. S3–S33). However, differences between study types were detected for 12 : 0 (lauric acid) and oleic acid (OA) (online Supplementary Fig. S5 and S9). For many parameters, there was considerable variation between results obtained in different countries and in some cases also different studies carried out in the same country (online Supplementary Fig. 3–33).

For many parameters, MPD based on all available data produced values similar to those calculated using only data for which measures of variance were reported (i.e. those qualifying for WM) (Fig. 2 and 3; online Supplementary Table S9). However, for DHA, β-carotene and lutein, inclusion criteria had a large effect on the MPD.

In addition, when the calculated MPD were superimposed onto smd (with 95 % CI) results at an appropriate scale (−80 to +80 for MPD and −3 to +3 for smd), a reasonable match was observed, with MPD for most constituents falling within the 95 % CI for smd (Fig. 2 and 3). However, for some parameters (EPA, DHA, n-3:n-6 ratio and I), MPD fell outside the 95 % CI of smd and therefore ought to be seen as less reliable.

For the composition parameters included in Fig. 2 and 3, sensitivity analyses based on (1) different inclusion criteria/data-handling methods for UM or WM or (2) exclusion of 20 % of studies with the least precise treatment effects from the WM produced broadly similar results to the standard meta-analysis protocols.

Overall assessment of the strength of evidence using an adapted GRADE( Reference Guyatt, Oxman and Vist 47 ) approach highlighted some uncertainties in the evidence base, but overall strength of evidence of WM results was high or moderate for seventeen of the thirty-one parameters shown in Fig. 2 and 3 (Table 1).

Relationship between management and milk composition

The bi-plot derived from the RDA (Fig. 5) shows the relationships between diet components and the breed index (proportion on non-Holstein Friesian genetics in the herd), and the nutritional composition of milk. The horizontal axis 1 of the bi-plots explained 51 % of the variation and the vertical axis 2 a further 1·1 %. Variance in the RDA was explained by the intakes of concentrate feeds (F=241, P=0·002), hay and straw (F=64, P=0·002), maize silage (F=48, P=0·002), breed index (F=14, P=0·002), other silages (F=14, P=0·002) and grazing-based fresh forage intake (F=1, P=0·280).

Fig. 5 Bi-plot derived from the redundancy analysis showing the relationship between milk composition parameters (fatty acids () and antioxidants ()) and cows’ feeding and rearing parameters (categorical explanatory variables (, )) and quantitative explanatory variables (). 6:3, n-3:n-6 Fatty acid ratio; 2R, synthetic isomers of α-tocopherol; 3R, natural isomers of α-tocopherol; BC, β-carotene; BI, breed index; CLA9, rumenic acid (cis-9,trans-11-18 : 2); CO, concentrate feeds; CONV, conventional production system; GA, grazing intake; GS, grass silage; H/S, hay or straw; LA, linoleic acid (cis-9,12-18 : 2); LU, lutein; LR, lauristic acid (12 : 0); MA, myristic acid (14 : 0); MS, maize silage; OA, oleic acid (cis-9-18 : 1); ORG, organic production system; OS, other silage; PA, palmitic acid (16 : 0); SA, stearic acid (18 : 0); VA, vaccenic acid (trans-11-18 : 1); ZE, zeaxanthin.

RDA results indicated negative associations between concentrate, maize silage, other silages and hay and straw intakes and a number of nutritionally desirable FA (total PUFA, n-3 PUFA, ALA, CLA9) and antioxidants (3R stereoisomers of α-tocopherol, β-carotene, lutein and zeaxanthin) along axis 1. These milk composition parameters also showed strong positive associations with grazing intake (Fig. 5).

In contrast, there were positive associations between concentrate, maize silage, other silages and hay and straw intakes, and SFA, 16 : 0, total n-6 PUFA, LA, 2R stereoisomers of α-tocopherol and the n-6:n-3 PUFA ratio, along axis 1. The same milk composition parameters showed negative associations with grazing intake (Fig. 5).

Associations between the breed index and milk composition were generally weaker (Fig. 5).

Organic and conventional management were included as passive drivers in the RDA and aligned with the active drivers (1) grazing and grass silage intake, or (2) concentrate, maize and other silages and hay and straw intake, respectively, as well as associated milk quality parameters (Fig. 5).

A separate RDA was carried out in which data from conventional farms that used high-grazing-based feeding regimens (which conformed with organic feed regulations) were included as an additional passive driver (low-input conventional) (online Supplementary Fig. S34). Organic and low-input conventional systems are in a very similar position on the bi-plot, suggesting that they have a very similar impact on milk composition (Fig. 5).

Discussion

Milk yields in organic and conventional dairy production systems

The meta-analysis results showing that milk yields per cow were on average 20 % lower in organic compared with conventional systems confirms results from a previous meta-analysis( Reference Palupi, Jayanegara and Ploeger 13 ), which linked lower yields per cow to the use of high grazing/conserved forage diets used in organic dairy systems. This confirms previous studies that reported that grazing-based diets result in lower yield per cow than the higher-concentrate diets typically used in high-input conventional dairy production( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Larsen 27 , Reference Butler, Nielsen and Slots 30 Reference Stergiadis, Leifert and Seal 34 , Reference Glasser, Doreau and Ferlay 48 , Reference Walker, Dunshea and Doyle 53 ). However, the study of Palupi et al.( Reference Palupi, Jayanegara and Ploeger 13 ) also reported higher total fat and protein content for organic milk, whereas the meta-analysis reported here found no significant difference in total fat and protein content between organic and conventional milk.

Composition of milk from organic and conventional dairy production systems

Fatty acid composition

Results of the meta-analyses reported here showed that organic milk had a similar total SFA and MUFA content, but higher concentrations of total PUFA and n-3 PUFA compared with conventional milk, which is broadly consistent with results from three previous meta-analyses( Reference Dangour, Dodhia and Hayter 10 , Reference Palupi, Jayanegara and Ploeger 13 , Reference Smith-Spangler, Brandeau and Hunter 14 ).

The findings of higher concentrations of (1) individual n-3 PUFA (ALA, EPA and DPA), (2) VA, (3) CLA9 and higher n-3:n-6 ratios in organic milk in this study are also consistent with results reported by Palupi et al.( Reference Palupi, Jayanegara and Ploeger 13 ). Dangour et al.( Reference Dangour, Dodhia and Hayter 10 ) and Smith-Spangler et al.( Reference Smith-Spangler, Brandeau and Hunter 14 ) did not publish meta-analysis results for individual n-3 PUFA, CLA9 and n-3:n-6 or n-6:n-3 ratios in milk, but the higher VA concentrations in organic milk were also confirmed by Smith-Spangler et al.( Reference Smith-Spangler, Brandeau and Hunter 14 ).

Palupi et al.( Reference Palupi, Jayanegara and Ploeger 13 ) also detected significantly lower concentrations of total n-6 PUFA, LA and OA (the main MUFA in milk). For these parameters, no significant difference was detected in the meta-analyses reported here.

Sensitivity analyses showed that for most of the FA composition parameters discussed above the method of data synthesis did not have a large effect on results, in terms of both statistical significance and the magnitude of difference between organic and conventional milk. This indicates that there is now a sufficiently large body of published information on the FA composition of organic milk to identify substantive differences across study types and pedo-climatic and agronomic environments. It also increases confidence in conclusions drawn regarding potential nutritional impacts of switching from conventional to organic milk consumption (see also below).

RDA of data from a large cross-European farm and milk quality survey identified contrasting feeding regimens (especially the proportion of grazing, concentrate and conserved forage in the diet) used in organic and conventional production systems as the main drivers for differences in milk fat and antioxidant profiles. Most importantly, RDA results indicate that high fresh forage intakes by grazing animals (as prescribed by organic farming standards) increase concentrations of nutritionally desirable FA (e.g. PUFA, MUFA, n-3 PUFA, ALA, cis-9,trans-11-CLA) and antioxidants/vitamins (except for synthetic 2R stereoisomers of α-tocopherol) in milk, whereas high concentrate intakes have an opposite effect. Results from the RDA also indicated that high intakes of concentrate (and to a lesser extent grass and maize silages) increase concentrations of total n-6 FA, LA and AA in milk. When included as a passive driver in the RDA, the alignment of ‘organic management’ with grazing intake and conserved forage feeding and ‘conventional management’ with concentrate intake and vitamin supplementation further supports the conclusion that contrasting feeding regimens are the main reason for the composition differences between organic and conventional milk.

These results are consistent with the findings of a wide range of experimental studies that investigated contrasting dairy cow diets on rumen biohydrogenation and other processes influencing milk fat composition and demonstrated the benefits of high-forage diets on milk fat quality (e.g. concentrations of beneficial PUFA and antioxidants)( Reference Walker, Dunshea and Doyle 53 Reference Coppa, Ferlay and Chassaing 56 ). A recent Norwegian study also showed that management and botanical composition of grassland significantly affects the n-3 PUFA concentration in milk from organic but not conventional farms( Reference Adler, Jensen and Govasmark 57 ). It is also interesting to note that models to predict milk FA profiles, based on farming practice, especially feeding regimens, have recently been developed using data collected in on-farm surveys( Reference Coppa, Ferlay and Chassaing 56 ).

The fat concentrations and FA profiles in milk from small ruminants (goats and sheep) and buffalo are known to differ from those of bovine milk( 58 ), and available data for goat, sheep and buffalo milk were therefore not pooled with data for bovine milk in meta-analyses. However, when comparative composition data for milk from small ruminants (sheep and goats) and buffalo were pooled, it was possible to carry out meta-analyses for certain fat composition parameters (e.g. total MUFA and PUFA, VA, CLA9 and LA). Although these showed some composition difference (e.g. higher CLA and ALA concentrations in organic milk) similar to those detected for bovine milk, there were also some differences (e.g. higher MUFA and lower LA concentrations in organic milk). Additional and more substantial comparative studies for non-bovine milk are therefore required to confirm results, before conclusions can be drawn as to potential health impacts of switching to organic milk and dairy products from small ruminants and buffalo.

There were insufficient published comparative data to carry out robust meta-analysis for FA concentrations in processed dairy products (e.g. fermented milk, yoghurt, cheese, curd, butter and whey). However, results in the small number of studies available showed similar trends to those found for milk for a range of fat composition parameters including for total n-3 PUFA, VLC n-3 PUFA and CLA9. This is not surprising, as previous studies suggest that processing has no or only a small impact on FA profiles in milk( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Larsen 27 ).

Antioxidant/vitamin and minerals

Results indicated that organic milk has higher concentrations of α-tocopherol, which is consistent with the results of the only one previous meta-analysis comparing α-tocopherol concentrations in bovine milk( Reference Palupi, Jayanegara and Ploeger 13 ). A study from the UK in which concentrations of different stereoisomers of α-tocopherol were compared in organic and conventional milk indicated that this is because of 3R α-tocopherol (the dominant stereoisomer found in bovine milk) concentration being higher in organic milk, whereas concentration of the 2R stereoisomers were similar in organic and conventional milk( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Slots 30 ). This is not surprising, as (1) organic farming standards prescribe high intakes of fresh forage, which is the main, natural source for α-tocopherol in the dairy diet and nearly exclusively contains 3R stereoisomers of α-tocopherol; and (2) 2R stereoisomers are only found in synthetic vitamin E supplements, which are widely used in conventional dairy production, but prohibited under organic farming standards( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Larsen 27 , Reference Butler, Nielsen and Slots 30 ). However, it should be pointed out that in some European countries (e.g. the Nordic countries) organic farmers can obtain derogations to use synthetic vitamins, especially during the winter indoor period( Reference Palupi, Jayanegara and Ploeger 13 , Reference Butler, Nielsen and Slots 30 ). Sensitivity analysis showed that the method of data synthesis did not have a large effect on results, in terms of both statistical significance and the magnitude of difference between organic and conventional milk.

Not surprisingly, RDA identified vitamin supplements as a strong driver for increased concentration of the 2R stereoisomers of α-tocopherol in milk, as the synthetic vitamin E in supplements contains a high proportion of the 2R stereoisomers( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Slots 30 ). In contrast, RDA identified fresh forage intake as a strong driver for concentrations of 3R stereoisomers of α-tocopherol and carotenoids in milk. The RDA therefore supports the findings of the meta-analyses, one other review/meta-analysis( Reference Palupi, Jayanegara and Ploeger 13 ) and a previous UK study( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Slots 30 ), which concluded that higher intake of natural α-tocopherol and carotenoids from fresh forage in organic dairy systems more than compensates for synthetic vitamin supplementation in conventional systems with respect to vitamin concentrations in milk.

The finding of lower I and Se concentrations in organic milk are more surprising, as mineral supplementation is permitted under organic farming standards, if necessary, and is widely used in both organic and conventional dairy productions, as they were shown to improve animal health( Reference Flachowsky, Franke and Meyer 59 , Reference Enjalbert, Lebreton and Salat 60 ). There are published data on the relative use of mineral and I supplements in organic and conventional systems. However, the amounts of I supplements used in organic dairy systems is likely to be lower( Reference Bath, Button and Rayman 61 ) (P. Melchett, Soil Association, personal communication) than in conventional farming systems. This is may be due to (1) organic systems using less concentrate feeds, (2) mineral supplementation having to be specifically requested by farmers for organic feeds in many countries (whereas mineral supplements are routinely added to conventional concentrate feeds) and/or (3) the use of I teat disinfection (which is known to significantly increase I concentrations in milk( Reference Flachowsky, Franke and Meyer 59 )) being less common in organic production. I in milk is known to fluctuate seasonally( Reference Haug, Høstmark and Harstad 62 ), reflecting greater supplementation of dairy cows in winter compared with summer. It is also strongly influenced by proximity to the sea, as I is deposited from marine evaporation, and can be lost during processing with high-temperature pasteurisation( Reference Flachowsky, Franke and Meyer 59 ). However, publications reporting comparative data on I concentrations provide insufficient information on the location, teat disinfection methods and details of mineral supplements used on farms that produced the milk samples, and it therefore remains unclear to what extent these factors affected the results of the meta-analyses. Although the I content of organic milk was significantly lower, concentrations in both organic (147 μg/l) and conventional (248 μg/l) milk fall within the range reported in a review of European farm surveys by Flachowsky et al.( Reference Flachowsky, Franke and Meyer 59 ) which suggested that current I concentrations in milk may be too high in animals receiving high levels of feed I. For this reason EFSA have proposed a reduction in the permitted levels of I in dairy cattle feed from 5 to 2 mg I/kg feed( 63 ). However, it should be pointed out that the I requirement in pregnant and breast-feeding women is higher (250 μg/d) than in other adults (150 μg/d)( Reference Bath and Rayman 64 ). As dairy products are a major source of I, low levels of dairy consumption in these groups is therefore more likely to result in deficiency with organic dairy products, especially if I intakes are not increased by other means (e.g. consumption of fish, shellfish, I-fortified table salt or I supplements).

Se concentrations in milk reflect the Se intake by lactating cows, from that naturally occurring in their feed (largely dependent on soil Se status) and that added as supplements( Reference Haug, Høstmark and Harstad 62 ). Although results of the meta-analysis show concentrations of Se in organic milk to be slightly but significantly lower than conventional milk, mean values for both fall between levels reported for milk from USA (considered to have a high Se status) and Norway (considered to be low in Se)( Reference Haug, Høstmark and Harstad 62 ). Apart from mineral supplements, contrasting conditions (Se concentrations, fertilisation regimens and soil pH) and their impact on Se concentrations in forage and concentrate feeds may also contribute to the difference in Se concentrations between organic and conventional milk. For example, in Finland, mineral N fertiliser is supplemented with Se to compensate for the low Se concentrations in Finnish soils; however, as mineral N fertilisers are not permitted under organic farming standards, contrasting fertilisation regimens may at least partially explain differences in Se content of organic and conventional milk( Reference Lavu, Du Laing and Van de Wiele 65 ).

The finding of marginally higher concentration of Fe in organic compared with conventional milk is largely inconsequential, as milk is widely recognised as a relatively poor source of dietary Fe( Reference McDonald, Edwards and Greenhalgh 66 ).

Mineral composition was not determined in the cross-European dairy management and milk yield and quality survey used from RDA. It would therefore be important to carry out mineral composition surveys across regions with different pedo-climatic conditions and dairy management practices to identify the main drivers for mineral composition in both organic and conventional dairy production.

Mineral supplementation standards and guidelines are currently reviewed by organic sector bodies and certification organisations; there is an ongoing R&D programme to evaluate strategies available for raising concentrations of certain minerals in UK organic milk (especially I and Se) and associate benefits and risks( 67 ). There are well-established relatively inexpensive sustainable methods (e.g. increased use of mineral supplement, use of I teat disinfectants, use of Se-fortified organic fertilisers or sustainably sourced seaweeds) to increase both I and Se concentrations, but the main challenge with both minerals is that both inadequate and excessive supply have negative health impacts and that the amounts for adequate and excessive supply are close( Reference Flachowsky, Franke and Meyer 59 , Reference Lavu, Du Laing and Van de Wiele 65 ) (see also section on ‘Potential nutritional impacts of composition differences’).

Potential nutritional impacts of composition differences

Dietary n-3 PUFA intakes

Adequate intakes (AI) for PUFA recommended for adults by the EFSA are 4–8 % of energy intake for LA, 0·5–0·75 % of energy intake for ALA and 250–550 mg/d for EPA+DHA( 49 , Reference Simopoulos and Cleland 68 ). EFSA also recommended an additional 100–200 mg/d DHA intake during pregnancy and lactation( 49 , Reference Simopoulos and Cleland 68 ). Current estimated mean intakes are known to be too high for LA, match AI recommendations for ALA, but reach less than half the AI for VLC n-3 PUFA( 49 , Reference Simopoulos and Cleland 68 ). North American and European agencies currently advise consumers to increase fish and especially oily fish (e.g. salmon and herring) consumption to improve VLC n-3 PUFA intake and reduce CVD risk( Reference Raatz, Silverstein and Jahns 69 ). Unfortunately, implementing these recommendation of higher fish consumption widely across the human population is thought to be impossible, as most of the world’s fish stocks are already fully or over-exploited. In addition, concerns about the sustainability/environmental impacts of fish farming, Hg/dioxin contamination levels in oil-rich fish in some regions of the world and recent studies linking very high intakes of oily fish/fish oil supplements with an increased prostate cancer risk( Reference Raatz, Silverstein and Jahns 69 Reference Brasky, Darke and Song 71 ) cast further doubt on this approach. It is therefore thought to be essential to develop additional/complementary dietary approaches to increase long-chain n-3 FA supply in line with current AI recommendations.

On the basis of the meta-analyses results, concentrations of VLC n-3 PUFA were estimated to be 58 % higher in organic compared with conventional milk, and a switch from conventional to organic milk and dairy consumption could therefore be one such complementary dietary approach, especially as recent studies indicate that processing of milk into high-fat products such as butter and cheese (which account for a high proportion of milk fat intake) does not change the fat composition and the relative difference in n-3 PUFA between organic and conventional dairy products( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Larsen 27 , Reference Bergamo, Fedele and Iannibelli 72 ). For example, consumption of half a litre of full-fat milk (or equivalent fat intakes with dairy products) can be estimated to provide 34 and 22 % of the actual and 16 % (39 mg) and 11 % (25 mg) of the recommended daily VLC n-3 PUFA intake with organic and conventional milk consumption, respectively.

The estimated additional VLC n-3 PUFA intake with organic milk does not take into account potential increases in the ALA to EPA conversion rates associated with the lower LA:ALA ratio in organic milk/dairy products (discussed below) and the relative capacity of individuals to convert/elongate ALA into longer-chain n-3 PUFA( Reference Emken, Adlof and Gulley 73 Reference Brenna, Salem and Sinclair 75 ). However, it should be pointed out that there is still considerable scientific uncertainty about the effect of LA intake on ALA to VLC n-3 conversion( Reference Raatz, Silverstein and Jahns 69 , Reference Emken, Adlof and Gulley 73 Reference Welch, Shrestha and Lentjes 80 ).

Dietary n-6:n-3 and linoleic acid:α-linolenic acid ratios

It has been suggested that dietary intake of n-6 (especially LA) relative to n-3 FA is too high in typical Western European diets( Reference Massiera, Barbry and Guesnet 81 ); estimates for n-6:n-3 PUFA ratios are between 12:1 and 15:1, and for some individuals they are as high as 40:1( 49 , Reference Simopoulos and Cleland 68 , Reference Wijendran and Hayes 82 ). Current recommendations are to achieve an n-6:n-3 ratio between 4:1 and 1:1( Reference Simopoulos 83 ). Reductions in total n-6 and LA intake have been suggested because LA is the precursor of the pro-inflammatory FA AA and stimulates adipogenesis (and thereby the risk of obesity) to a greater extent than n-3 FA( Reference Massiera, Barbry and Guesnet 81 ). In addition, excessive LA intakes during pregnancy and the first years of life have been linked to a range of neurodevelopmental deficits and abnormalities( Reference Ryan, Astwood and Gautier 84 ), and there is evidence that high n-6:n-3 PUFA and LA:ALA ratios in the diet increases the risk of a range of other chronic diseases including certain cancers, inflammatory and autoimmune diseases, and CVD( 49 , Reference Simopoulos and Cleland 68 ).

However, it is difficult to estimate to what extent the differences in FA profiles may affect human health, as there are only a small number of studies in which health impacts of switching from organic to conventional milk consumption were studied. One study focused on the effect of organic milk consumption on eczema in children under 2 years in the Netherlands (a country with relatively high milk consumption)( Reference Kummeling, Thijs and Huber 85 ). It reported that eczema was significantly lower in children from families consuming organic rather than conventional milk. This may have been because of the higher n-3 PUFA concentrations and lower n-6:n-3 PUFA ratio in organic milk, as there is increasing evidence for anti-allergenic effects of n-3 FA( Reference Calder, Kremmyda and Vlachava 76 ). For example, a recent animal study showed that increasing dietary VLC n-3 PUFA intake prevented allergic sensitisation to cows’ milk protein in mice( Reference van den Elsen, van Esch and Hofman 77 ). Two other cohort studies (one in Denmark and one in Norway) investigated associations between milk/dairy product consumption during pregnancy and the incidence of hypospadias, the most common genital birth defect in boys( Reference Christensen, Asklund and Skakkebæk 86 , Reference Brantsæter, Torjusen and Meltzer 87 ). The Danish study found that ‘frequent consumption of high-fat dairy products (milk, butter) while rarely or never choosing the organic alternative to these products during pregnancy was associated with increased odds of hypospadia’( Reference Christensen, Asklund and Skakkebæk 86 ). The more recent Norwegian study confirmed these results and reported that (1) organic food consumption was associated with lower odds of hypospadia, and (2) the closest associations were found with organic vegetable and milk/dairy product consumption( Reference Brantsæter, Torjusen and Meltzer 87 ).

Conjugated linoleic acid

Milk and dairy products account for up to 67 % of total dietary CLA intake, as CLA is only found in ruminant fat( Reference Lawson, Moss and Givens 88 ). Organic milk was found to have 39 % higher concentrations of CLA than conventional milk, but it also had 46 % higher concentrations of VA, which is converted to CLA by human desaturase enzymes. Thus, the potential increase in CLA supply with organic dairy consumption may be even higher( Reference Butler, Collomb and Rehberger 31 Reference Larsen, Nielsen and Butler 33 , Reference Lawson, Moss and Givens 88 ). CLA has been linked to anti-obesity, anti-diabetogenic, anti-carcinogenic and other potential health benefits. However, most evidence for beneficial health impacts of CLA consumption is from in vitro and animal studies in which diets were supplemented with synthetic CLA, and human dietary intervention studies often did not detect significant effects of increasing CLA intake( Reference Belury 21 , Reference Nagao and Yanagita 22 ). As a result, there is still controversy about the exact health impacts of increased CLA intake in humans and the dose/intake levels required to demonstrate beneficial effects( Reference Nagao and Yanagita 22 ).

A recent meta-analysis of eighteen human studies concluded that CLA supplementation produces a modest weight loss in humans, when very high doses of synthetic CLA (approximately 3·2 g/d) were used( Reference Whigham, Watras and Schoeller 89 ). However, it is also important to point out that most in vitro, and both animal and human dietary intervention, studies were carried out using synthetic CLA, which has a different CLA isomer balance to the naturally occurring CLA found in milk( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Slots 30 , Reference Butler, Collomb and Rehberger 31 ). As CLA isomers differ in their biological activity, results from animal and human dietary intervention studies based on synthetic CLA may not reflect the physiological effects of increasing CLA intake via a switch to organic milk consumption. For example, anti-obesity effects were mainly linked to CLA10 (trans-10-cis-12-18 : 2), which makes up 50 % of synthetic CLA( Reference Belury 21 , Reference Nagao and Yanagita 22 ). In contrast, CLA in milk is over 80 % CLA9 (cis-9-trans-11-18 : 2), with CLA10 accounting for <10 % of total CLA( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Slots 30 , Reference Butler, Collomb and Rehberger 31 ).

To our knowledge, no animal or human dietary intervention studies in which the effect of increasing CLA intake via milk and dairy products with a higher CLA content (e.g. organic milk) have been carried out, and until such studies have been completed it is not possible to estimate potential health impacts of increasing CLA consumption via switching to organic milk consumption.

Antioxidants/vitamins and minerals

Antioxidants/vitamins

Increased dietary intakes of fat-soluble vitamins/antioxidants such as carotenoids and α-tocopherol are thought to be nutritionally desirable. Increased antioxidant intake has been shown to reduce oxidative stress, a known risk factor in a range of chronic health conditions such as CVD, certain cancers and reduced immune status( Reference Willcox, Ash and Catignani 90 ). However, as dairy products are not major sources of vitamin E and carotenoids in the human diet, it is unlikely that the slightly higher α-tocopherol concentrations found in organic milk will have a major health impact in humans.

Iodine

The daily recommended intake for I in UK is 140 µg/d( 91 ). Milk and dairy products are important dietary sources for I, and they have been reported to supply 30–60 % of intake( Reference Flachowsky, Franke and Meyer 59 ). On the basis of the results from the meta-analyses, a daily consumption of half a litre of milk is therefore estimated to provide 53 and 88 % of daily I intake from organic and conventional milk, respectively. At this level of milk/dairy consumption, both organic and conventional products would be expected to provide adequate but not excessive intakes.

Although there is a focus on overcoming I deficiency in some countries and sectors of society( Reference Vanderpump, Lazarus and Smyth 92 , Reference Haug, Taugbøl and Prestløkken 93 ), there is also concern that excessive concentrations of I in milk and dairy products could result in thyrotoxicosis and other adverse health effects in both livestock and humans( 94 Reference Phillips, Nelson and Barker 96 ). This apparent contradiction arises from a combination of (1) the relatively narrow margin between dietary I deficiency (<140 μg/d) and excess (>500 μg/d), (2) the wide range in I concentrations found in milk and (3) variation in milk and dairy consumption. I intakes from both organic and conventional milk could be excessive in regions with very high milk and dairy consumption, such as Finland, Sweden and the Netherlands, where average daily consumption of milk is close to 1 litre/d( 97 ). A recent review on I also suggests that the widespread use of I as a teat disinfectant and high I supplementation of livestock feeds has led to excessive dietary intakes of I and negative effects on human health in some regions of the world (e.g. North America) and highlight recent recommendations to reduce permitted levels of I supplementation for livestock( Reference Flachowsky, Franke and Meyer 59 ). The lower I levels from organic production systems could therefore be considered beneficial and may soon be matched in conventional dairy production( Reference Flachowsky, Franke and Meyer 59 ).

On the other hand, it has also been suggested that a lower I content in organic milk could result in deficiency in population groups with a higher demand of I (e.g. pregnant, nursing and young women), low dairy consumption and/or insufficient supply of I from other foods( Reference Zimmermann 98 , Reference Zimmermann, Aeberli and Torresani 99 ). However, it may not be sensible to strive to raise I levels in milk to accommodate population groups with a high I requirement or low dairy consumption, as this increases the risk of excessive intakes by population groups with an average I need and/or high milk consumption. Adjusting dairy I supplementation and concentrations in milk to meet ‘average’ or ‘slightly below average’ needs of consumers is thought to be a better strategy, as it (1) reduces the health risks from excessive supply for consumers with high dairy intakes and (2) is relatively easy for individuals with a high I demand and/or low dairy intake to raise their I intake to satisfactory levels via mineral supplements and/or the use of I-fortified table salt( 94 , Reference Zimmermann 98 , Reference Zimmermann, Aeberli and Torresani 99 ).

Selenium

Se concentrations in animal feed and foods are increasingly recognised as being too low in many regions of the world. Insufficient Se supply was more frequently associated with livestock rather than human diets and can impair immune and antioxidant status( Reference Haug, Høstmark and Harstad 62 , Reference McDonald, Edwards and Greenhalgh 66 ). Milk and dairy products are one source for Se in the human diet( Reference Lavu, Du Laing and Van de Wiele 65 ), and results from the meta-analysis show lower concentrations of Se in organic compared with conventional milk. However, switching from conventional to organic milk/dairy product consumption is unlikely to have a major effect on Se intake, especially in regions with low to moderate dairy consumption. On the basis of UK nutrient requirements( 91 ), it can be estimated that consumption of half a litre of milk will be equivalent to 11 and 13 % of recommended intakes with organic and conventional milk/dairy products, respectively.

Iron

Different from meat, milk is not a major source of Fe in the human diet( Reference Lim, Riddell and Nowson 100 ). The slightly higher Fe intake with organic milk is therefore unlikely to have a major nutritional impact.

The need to optimise mineral supply in dairy production (especially with respect to Se) should be considered in future revisions of organic farming regulations for mineral supplementation of livestock and fortification of processed foods.

Strength of evidence and exploration of heterogeneity

Risk of bias of individual studies was generally high and not universally mitigated by large effects. Publication bias was also strongly suspected for many outcomes. Overall strength of evidence was variable, but was judged as moderate for the primary outcomes (Table 1). Thus, some uncertainty surrounds the conclusions of this work, largely arising from poor reporting in the primary literature. We also speculate on the widespread problem of selective reporting, although this was not formally evaluated.

The finding of significant differences between countries/geographic regions, as well as production systems, is consistent with previous studies that explained similar findings with contrasting dairy management regimens being used for organic and/or conventional systems (e.g. length of outdoor grazing period, dietary regimens and breed choice/selection) between countries/regions( Reference Butler, Nielsen and Larsen 27 ). Differences in dairy management practices are therefore thought to be a major source of variation. However, meta-regressions are subject to bias and confounding. Here, additional variation was likely because of pooling data across experimental approaches (retail surveys, farm surveys and experimental studies) in the meta-analyses, although there were no substantial differences in the results obtained with different experimental approaches. Other confounding factors cannot be discounted.

The need to carry out dietary intervention and cohort studies

Overall, it can be concluded that a switch from intensive conventional to organic production standards will result in substantive improvements in milk fat composition, especially in the supply of nutritionally desirable VLC n-3 PUFA. Potential impacts of composition differences on human health currently have to be extrapolated from existing information about the effects of compounds such as VLC n-3 PUFA, the n-3:n-6 PUFA ratio, CLA, antioxidants/vitamins and minerals on human health, as there are virtually no studies in which impacts of organic food consumption on animal or human health or health-related biomarkers were assessed. However, the significant differences in nutritionally relevant compounds identified by the meta-analyses reported here demonstrate the need to carry out human dietary intervention and cohort studies designed to quantify the health impact of switching to milk and dairy products from organic or other ‘low-input’ grazing-based livestock production systems that deliver similar composition changes.

The argument for more rigorous human intervention studies to confirm health benefits is supported by recent human cohort studies, which suggest that a switch to organic milk consumption may reduce the risk of hypospadias in boys( Reference Christensen, Asklund and Skakkebæk 86 , Reference Brantsæter, Torjusen and Meltzer 87 ) and eczema in children under 2 years of age( Reference Kummeling, Thijs and Huber 85 ). Clearly, additional dietary intervention and cohort studies should be carried out to identify/quantify other potential human health impacts of switching to organic milk and dairy product consumption.

Acknowledgements

Support from Lord Peter Melchett (Policy Director, Soil Association, Bristol, UK) and Bruno Martin (Centre Clermont-Ferrand-Theix, Institut National de la Recerche Agronomique, INRA, Saint Genès Champanelle, France) for the critical review/editing of the manuscript is gratefully acknowledged by the authors.

The authors are grateful for funding from the European Community financial participation under the Sixth Framework Programme for Research, Technological Development and Demonstration Activities for the Integrated Project QUALITYLOWINPUTFOOD, FP6-FOOD-CT-2003-506358. The authors also gratefully acknowledge financial and technical support from the Sheepdrove Trust for the meta-analyses of data on composition of organic and conventional foods.

D. Ś.-T. is a nutritionist who carried out a major part of the literature search and extraction and contributed to writing of the manuscript. M. B. is an animal and food scientist who designed the database, carried out most of the meta-analyses and contributed to writing of the manuscript. C. J. S. is a human nutritionist who contributed to the design of the study, discussion of potential health impacts of composition differences and the critical review of the manuscript. R. S. is an environmental modeller and data analyser, who helped design the literature search and database storage, and helped to design and provided guidance for the meta-analyses used. C. B. is an agronomist specialising on organic production systems, who supported the literature review (especially with respect to studies in North and South America) and the preparation/review of the manuscript. H. S. is an animal nutritionist who supported the literature review and critical revision of the manuscript, especially with respect to studies from Scandinavian countries. J. G.-O. is a human nutritionist who supported the literature review and the discussion of potential health impacts of composition differences identified in the meta-analyses. E. R. is a human nutritionist and supported the literature review and critical revision of the manuscript, especially with respect to human intervention studies focused on health impacts of organic food consumption. K. S.-S. is an animal nutritionist/physiologists who supported the literature review and critical revision of the manuscript, especially with respect to animal dietary intervention studies focused on physiological and health impacts of organic feed consumption. M. E. is an ecologist and statistician who designed and carried out the redundancy analyses. G. C. is an animal scientist and supported the literature search, critical review of the manuscript and the discussion relating to interactions between feeding regimens and milk/meat quality. M. K. L. is a biochemist/nutritionist and provided data sets and supported the design of the redundancy analyses, and supported the literature review and critical review of the manuscript. S. Stergiadis is an animal scientist who provided data sets and prepared data for redundancy analyses. He also supported the literature review and prepared sections of the discussion. T. J. is the NEFG office manager and supported the literature search and extraction. U. N. is head of Europe’s largest organic farming institutes and supported the literature review (especially with respect to studies linking feeding regimens and milk/meat quality parameters) and critical review of the manuscript. T. S. is an animal physiologist and supported the literature review and critical revision of the manuscript, especially with respect to studies from Eastern European countries. P. C. C. is a nutritionist who supported the preparation (in particular introduction and discussion sections describing potential health impacts of changes in FA profiles in meat and milk) and critical review of the manuscript. G. C. B. is a nutritionist who supported the preparation (in particular introduction and discussion sections describing potential health impacts of changes in FA profiles in meat and milk) and critical review of the manuscript. H. Y. is a forage production agronomist who supported the literature review and preparation of the discussion sections dealing with associations between forage-based feeding regimens and milk composition. E. C. is a nutritionist/analytical chemist and has carried out the assessment of analytical methods used in different published studies. G. B. is an animal nutritionist/scientist who provided data sets and supported the design of the redundancy analyses, and supported the literature review and critical review of the manuscript. G. S. is a lecturer in Evidence Synthesis who provided advice on the conduct and interpretation of the meta-analysis and critical review of the manuscript. C. L. is an agronomist specialising on agricultural production systems design/improvement and the study of interactions between agronomic practices and food quality and safety. He led the design of the study, management of research project and the preparation of the manuscript.

The senior author of the paper, C. L., owns farm land in Germany that is managed to conventional farming standards and a smallholding in Greece that is managed to organic farming standards.

Supplementary material

For supplementary material/s referred to in this article, please visit http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1017/S0007114516000349

References

1. Willer, H & Kilcher, L (2011) The World of Organic Agriculture. Statistics and Emerging Trends 2011. FiBL-IFOAM Report. Bonn and Frick: IFOAM and FiBL.Google Scholar
2. Schultz, M & Huntrods, D (2011) Organic dairy profile. http://www.agmrc.org/commodities__products/livestock/dairy/organic_dairy_profile.cfm (accessed January 2013).Google Scholar
3. Soil Association (2011) Organic market report 2011. http://www.soilassociation.org/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=ZnJ54dF4kfw%3D&tabid=116 (accessed January 2013).Google Scholar
4. Yiridoe, EK, Bonti-Ankomah, S & Martin, RC (2005) Comparison of consumer perceptions and preference toward organic versus conventionally produced foods: a review and update of the literature. Renew Agric Food Syst 20, 193205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5. Oughton, E & Ritson, C (2007) Food consumers and organic agriculture. In Handbook of Organic Food Quality and Safety, pp. 7494 [J Cooper, U Niggli and C Leifert, editors]. Cambridge: Woodhouse Publishing Ltd.Google Scholar
6. Mallatou, H, Pappas, CP, Kondyli, E, et al. (1997) Pesticide residues in milk and cheeses from Greece. Sci Total Environ 196, 111117.Google Scholar
7. Salas, JH, González, MM, Noa, M, et al. (2003) Organophosphorus pesticide residues in Mexican commercial pasteurized milk. J Agric Food Chem 51, 44684471.Google Scholar
8. Melgar, MJ, Santaeufemia, M & García, MA (2010) Organophosphorus pesticide residues in raw milk and infant formulas from Spanish northwest. J Environ Sci Health B 45, 595600.Google Scholar
9. European Food Safety Authority (2013) European Union report on pesticide residues in food. EFSA J 11, 3130.Google Scholar
10. Dangour, AD, Dodhia, SK, Hayter, A, et al. (2009) Nutritional quality of organic foods: a systematic review. Am J Clin Nutr 90, 680685.Google Scholar
11. Brandt, K, Leifert, C, Sanderson, R, et al. (2011) Agroecosystem management and nutritional quality of plant foods: the case of organic fruits and vegetables. Crit Rev Plant Sci 30, 177197.Google Scholar
12. Cooper, J, Niggli, U & Leifert, C (2007) Handbook of Organic Food Safety and Quality. Cambridge: CRC Press.Google Scholar
13. Palupi, E, Jayanegara, A, Ploeger, A, et al. (2012) Comparison of nutritional quality between conventional and organic dairy products: a meta-analysis. J Sci Food Agric 92, 27742781.Google Scholar
14. Smith-Spangler, C, Brandeau, ML, Hunter, GE, et al. (2012) Are organic foods safer or healthier than conventional alternatives? A systematic review. Ann Intern Med 157, 348366.Google Scholar
15. Hu, FB, Manson, JE & Willett, WC (2001) Types of dietary fat and risk of coronary heart disease: a critical review. J Am Coll Nutr 20, 519.Google Scholar
16. Parodi, PW (2009) Has the association between saturated fatty acids, serum cholesterol and coronary heart disease been over emphasized? Int Dairy J 19, 345361.Google Scholar
17. German, JB, Gibson, RA, Krauss, RM, et al. (2009) A reappraisal of the impact of dairy foods and milk fat on cardiovascular disease risk. Eur J Nutr 48, 191203.Google Scholar
18. Kliem, KE & Givens, DI (2011) Dairy products in the food chain: their impact on health. Annu Rev Food Sci Technol 2, 2136.Google Scholar
19. Sun, Q, Ma, J, Campos, H, et al. (2007) Plasma and erythrocyte biomarkers of dairy fat intake and risk of ischemic heart disease. Am J Clin Nutr 86, 929937.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
20. Ruxton, CHS, Reed, SC, Simpson, MJA, et al. (2007) The health benefits of omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids: a review of the evidence. J Hum Nutr Diet 20, 275285.Google Scholar
21. Belury, MA (2002) Dietary conjugated linoleic acid in health: physiological effects and mechanisms of action. Annu Rev Nutr 22, 505531.Google Scholar
22. Nagao, K & Yanagita, T (2005) Conjugated fatty acids in food and their health benefits. J Biosci Bioeng 100, 152157.Google Scholar
23. Benjamin, S, Prakasan, P, Sreedharan, S, et al. (2015) Pros and cons of CLA consumption: an insight from clinical evidences. Nutr Metab (Lond) 12, 4.Google Scholar
24. Yang, B, Chen, H, Stanton, C, et al. (2015) Review of the roles of conjugated linoleic acid in health and disease. J Funct Foods 15, 314325.Google Scholar
25. Bhattacharya, A, Banu, J, Rahman, M, et al. (2006) Biological effects of conjugated linoleic acids in health and disease. J Nutr Biochem 17, 789810.Google Scholar
26. Brandt, K, Średnicka-Tober, D, Barański, M, et al. (2013) Methods for comparing data across differently designed agronomic studies: examples of different meta-analysis methods used to compare relative composition of plant foods grown using organic or conventional production methods, and a protocol for a systematic review. J Agric Food Chem 61, 71737180.Google Scholar
27. Butler, G, Nielsen, JH, Larsen, MK, et al. (2011) The effects of dairy management and processing on quality characteristics of milk and dairy products. NJAS-Wagen J Life Sci 58, 97102.Google Scholar
28. Benbrook, CM, Butler, G, Latif, MA, et al. (2013) Organic production enhances milk nutritional quality by shifting fatty acid composition: a United States-wide, 18-month study. PLOS ONE 8, e82429.Google Scholar
29. Schwendel, BH, Wester, TJ, Morel, PCH, et al. (2015) Invited review: organic and conventionally produced milk – an evaluation of factors influencing milk composition. J Dairy Sci 98, 721746.Google Scholar
30. Butler, G, Nielsen, JH, Slots, T, et al. (2008) Fatty acid and fat-soluble antioxidant concentrations in milk from high- and low-input conventional and organic systems: seasonal variation. J Sci Food Agric 88, 14311441.Google Scholar
31. Butler, G, Collomb, M, Rehberger, B, et al. (2009) Conjugated linoleic acid isomer concentrations in milk from high- and low-input management dairy systems. J Sci Food Agric 89, 697705.Google Scholar
32. Slots, T, Butler, G, Leifert, C, et al. (2009) Potentials to differentiate milk composition by different feeding strategies. J Dairy Sci 92, 20572066.Google Scholar
33. Larsen, MK, Nielsen, JH, Butler, G, et al. (2010) Milk quality as affected by feeding regimens in a country with climatic variation. J Dairy Sci 93, 28632873.Google Scholar
34. Stergiadis, S, Leifert, C, Seal, C, et al. (2012) Effect of feeding intensity and milking system on nutritionally relevant milk components in dairy farming systems in the North East of England. J Agric Food Chem 60, 72707281.Google Scholar
35. Barański, M, Średnicka-Tober, D, Volakakis, N, et al. (2014) Higher antioxidant and lower cadmium concentrations and lower incidence of pesticide residues in organically grown crops: a systematic literature review and meta-analyses. Br J Nutr 112, 794811.Google Scholar
36. Stewart, G (2010) Meta-analysis in applied ecology. Biol Lett 6, 7881.Google Scholar
37. Koricheva, J & Gurevitch, J (2013) Place of meta-analysis among other methods of research synthesis. In Handbook of Meta-Analysis in Ecology and Evolution, pp. 313 [J Koricheva, J Gurevitch and K Mengersen, editors]. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
38. Viechtbauer, W (2010) Conducting meta-analyses in R with the metafor package. J Stat Softw 36, 148.Google Scholar
39. Hedges, LV & Olkin, I (1985) Statistical Methods for Meta-Analysis. San Diego, CA: Academic Press.Google Scholar
40. Sanchez-Meca, J & Marin-Martinez, F (2010) Meta-analysis. In International Encyclopedia of Education, 3rd ed. pp. 274282 [P Peterson, E Baker and B McGaw, editors]. Amsterdam: Elsevier.Google Scholar
41. Lipsey, MW & Wilson, DB (2001) Practical Meta-Analysis. Applied Social Research Methods Series. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.Google Scholar
42. Hedges, LV, Gurevitch, J & Curtis, PS (1999) The meta-analysis of response ratios in experimental ecology. Ecology 80, 11501156.Google Scholar
43. Mengersen, K, Schmidt, C, Jennions, M, et al. (2013) Statistical models and approaches to inference. In Handbook of Meta-Analysis in Ecology and Evolution, pp. 89107 [J Koricheva, J Gurevitch and K Mengersen, editors]. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
44. Rothstein, HR (2005) Publication bias in meta-analysis. In Publication Bias in Meta-Analysis, pp. 17 [HR Rothstein, AJ Sutton and M Borenstein, editors]. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.Google Scholar
45. Gurevitch, J & Hedges, LV (1999) Statistical issues in ecological meta-analyses. Ecology 80, 11421149.Google Scholar
46. Manly, BFJ (2001) Randomization, Bootstrap and Monte Carlo Methods in Biology, 2nd ed. New York: Chapman and Hall.Google Scholar
47. Guyatt, GH, Oxman, AD, Vist, GE, et al. (2008) GRADE: an emerging consensus on rating quality of evidence and strength of recommendations. BMJ 336, 924926.Google Scholar
48. Glasser, F, Doreau, M, Ferlay, A, et al. (2007) Technical note: estimation of milk fatty acid yield from milk fat data. J Dairy Sci 90, 23022304.Google Scholar
49. European Food Safety Authority (2010) Scientific opinion on dietary reference values for fats, including saturated fatty acids, polyunsaturated fatty acids, monounsaturated fatty acids, trans fatty acids, and cholesterol. EFSA J 8, 1461.Google Scholar
50. Anderson, GH (1994) Dietary patterns vs. dietary recommendations: identifying the gaps for complex carbohydrate. Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr 34, 435440.Google Scholar
51. Akoh, CC (1995) Lipid-based fat substitutes. Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr 35, 405430.Google Scholar
52. CJFt, Braak & Smilauer, P (1998) CANOCO Reference Manual and User’s Guide to Canoco for Windows: Software for Canonical Community Ordination (Version 4) . Wageningen: Centre for Biometry.Google Scholar
53. Walker, GP, Dunshea, FR & Doyle, PT (2004) Effects of nutrition and management on the production and composition of milk fat and protein: a review. Aust J Agric Res 55, 10091028.Google Scholar
54. Dewhurst, RJ, Shingfield, KJ, Lee, MRF, et al. (2006) Increasing the concentrations of beneficial polyunsaturated fatty acids in milk produced by dairy cows in high-forage systems. Anim Feed Sci Technol 131, 168206.Google Scholar
55. Jensen, SK, Johannsen, AK & Hermansen, JE (1999) Quantitative secretion and maximal secretion capacity of retinol, beta-carotene and alpha-tocopherol into cows’ milk. J Dairy Res 66, 511522.Google Scholar
56. Coppa, M, Ferlay, A, Chassaing, C, et al. (2013) Prediction of bulk milk fatty acid composition based on farming practices collected through on-farm surveys. J Dairy Sci 96, 41974211.Google Scholar
57. Adler, SA, Jensen, SK, Govasmark, E, et al. (2013) Effect of short-term versus long-term grassland management and seasonal variation in organic and conventional dairy farming on the composition of bulk tank milk. J Dairy Sci 96, 57935810.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
58. International Dairy Federation (2011) Proceedings of IDF International Symposium on Sheep, Goat and other Non-Cow Milk. 16–18 May 2011, Athens, Greece.Google Scholar
59. Flachowsky, G, Franke, K, Meyer, U, et al. (2014) Influencing factors on iodine content of cow milk. Eur J Nutr 53, 351365.Google Scholar
60. Enjalbert, F, Lebreton, P & Salat, O (2006) Effects of copper, zinc and selenium status on performance and health in commercial dairy and beef herds: retrospective study. J Anim Physiol Anim Nutr (Berl) 90, 459466.Google Scholar
61. Bath, SC, Button, S & Rayman, MP (2012) Iodine concentration of organic and conventional milk: implications for iodine intake. Br J Nutr 107, 935940.Google Scholar
62. Haug, A, Høstmark, AT & Harstad, OM (2007) Bovine milk in human nutrition – a review. Lipids Health Dis 6, 25.Google Scholar
63. European Food Safety Authority (2013) Scientific opinion on the safety and efficacy of iodine compounds (E2) as feed additives for all animal species: calcium iodate anhydrous, based on a dossier submitted by Calibre Europe SPRL/BVBA. EFSA J 11, 3100.Google Scholar
64. Bath, SC & Rayman, MP (2015) Food fact sheet: iodine. https://www.bda.uk.com/foodfacts (accessed July 2015).Google Scholar
65. Lavu, RV, Du Laing, G, Van de Wiele, T, et al. (2012) Fertilizing soil with selenium fertilizers: impact on concentration, speciation, and bioaccessibility of selenium in leek (Allium ampeloprasum). J Agric Food Chem 60, 1093010935.Google Scholar
66. McDonald, P, Edwards, RA & Greenhalgh, JFD (2011) Animal Nutrition, 7th ed. Harlow: Pearson.Google Scholar
67. Soil Association (2015) Enhancing iodine and other trace element content of organic milk. http://www.soilassociation.org/innovativefarming/duchyfuturefarmingprogramme/researchprogramme/researchprojects (accessed July 2015).Google Scholar
68. Simopoulos, AP & Cleland, LG (2003) Omega-6/omega-3 essential fatty acid ratio: the scientific evidence. World Rev Nutr Diet 92, 1174.Google Scholar
69. Raatz, SK, Silverstein, JT, Jahns, L, et al. (2013) Issues of fish consumption for cardiovascular disease risk reduction. Nutrients 5, 10811097.Google Scholar
70. Brasky, TM, Till, C, White, E, et al. (2011) Serum phospholipid fatty acids and prostate cancer risk: results from the prostate cancer prevention trial. Am J Epidemiol 173, 14291439.Google Scholar
71. Brasky, TM, Darke, AK, Song, X, et al. (2013) Plasma phospholipid fatty acids and prostate cancer risk in the SELECT trial. J Natl Cancer Inst 105, 11321141.Google Scholar
72. Bergamo, P, Fedele, E, Iannibelli, L, et al. (2003) Fat-soluble vitamin contents and fatty acid composition in organic and conventional Italian dairy products. Food Chem 82, 625631.Google Scholar
73. Emken, EA, Adlof, RO & Gulley, RM (1994) Dietary linoleic acid influences desaturation and acylation of deuterium-labeled linoleic and linolenic acids in young adult males. Biochim Biophys Acta 4, 277288.Google Scholar
74. Burdge, GC & Calder, PC (2005) Conversion of alpha-linolenic acid to longer-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids in human adults. Reprod Nutr Dev 45, 581597.Google Scholar
75. Brenna, JT, Salem, N Jr, Sinclair, AJ, et al. (2009) alpha-Linolenic acid supplementation and conversion to n-3 long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acids in humans. Prostaglandins Leukot Essent Fatty Acids 80, 8591.Google Scholar
76. Calder, PC, Kremmyda, LS, Vlachava, M, et al. (2010) Is there a role for fatty acids in early life programming of the immune system? Proc Nutr Soc 69, 373380.Google Scholar
77. van den Elsen, LWJ, van Esch, BCAM, Hofman, GA, et al. (2013) Dietary long chain n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids prevent allergic sensitization to cow’s milk protein in mice. Clin Exp Allergy 43, 798810.Google Scholar
78. Childs, CE, Romeu-Nadal, M, Burdge, GC, et al. (2008) Gender differences in the n-3 fatty acid content of tissues. Proc Nutr Soc 67, 1927.Google Scholar
79. Williams, CM & Burdge, G (2006) Long-chain n-3 PUFA: plant v. marine sources. Proc Nutr Soc 65, 4250.Google Scholar
80. Welch, AA, Shrestha, SS, Lentjes, MAH, et al. (2010) Dietary intake and status of n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids in a population of fish-eating and non-fish-eating meat-eaters, vegetarians, and vegans and the precursor-product ratio of alpha-linolenic acid to long-chain n-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids results from the EPIC-Norfolk cohort. Am J Clin Nutr 92, 10401051.Google Scholar
81. Massiera, F, Barbry, P, Guesnet, P, et al. (2010) A Western-like fat diet is sufficient to induce a gradual enhancement in fat mass over generations. J Lipid Res 51, 23522361.Google Scholar
82. Wijendran, V & Hayes, KC (2004) Dietary n-6 and n-3 fatty acid balance and cardiovascular health. Annu Rev Nutr 24, 597615.Google Scholar
83. Simopoulos, AP (2002) The importance of the ratio of omega-6/omega-3 essential fatty acids. Biomed Pharmacother 56, 365379.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
84. Ryan, AS, Astwood, JD, Gautier, S, et al. (2010) Effects of long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid supplementation on neurodevelopment in childhood: a review of human studies. Prostaglandins Leukot Essent Fatty Acids 82, 305314.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
85. Kummeling, I, Thijs, C, Huber, M, et al. (2008) Consumption of organic foods and risk of atopic disease during the first 2 years of life in the Netherlands. Br J Nutr 99, 598605.Google Scholar
86. Christensen, JS, Asklund, C, Skakkebæk, NE, et al. (2013) Association between organic dietary choice during pregnancy and hypospadias in offspring: a study of mothers of 306 boys operated on for hypospadias. J Urol 189, 10771082.Google Scholar
87. Brantsæter, AL, Torjusen, H, Meltzer, HM, et al. (2015) Organic food consumption during pregnancy and hypospadias and cryptorchidism at birth: the Norwegian Mother and Child Cohort Study (MoBa). Environ Health Perspect (Epublication ahead of print version 9 July 2015).Google Scholar
88. Lawson, RE, Moss, AR & Givens, DI (2001) The role of dairy products in supplying conjugated linoleic acid to man’s diet: a review. Nutr Res Rev 14, 153172.Google Scholar
89. Whigham, LD, Watras, AC & Schoeller, DA (2007) Efficacy of conjugated linoleic acid for reducing fat mass: a meta-analysis in humans. Am J Clin Nutr 85, 12031211.Google Scholar
90. Willcox, JK, Ash, SL & Catignani, GL (2004) Antioxidants and prevention of chronic disease. Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr 44, 275295.Google Scholar
91. British Nutrition Foundation (2012) Nutrient requirements. http://www.nutrition.org.uk/nutritionscience/nutrients/nutrient-requirements.html?start=6 (accessed July 2015).Google Scholar
92. Vanderpump, MPJ, Lazarus, JH, Smyth, PP, et al. (2011) Iodine status of UK schoolgirls: a cross-sectional survey. Lancet 377, 20072012.Google Scholar
93. Haug, A, Taugbøl, O, Prestløkken, E, et al. (2012) Iodine concentration in Norwegian milk has declined in the last decade. Acta Agric. Scand A Anim Sci 62, 127134.Google Scholar
94. European Food Safety Authority (2006) Tolerable upper intake levels for vitamins and minerals. www.efsa.europa.eu/fr/ndatopics/docs/ndatolerableuil.pdf (accessed April 2013).Google Scholar
95. Vinceti, M, Wei, ET, Malagoli, C, et al. (2001) Adverse health effects of selenium in humans. Rev Environ Health 16, 233251.Google Scholar
96. Phillips, DIW, Nelson, M, Barker, DJP, et al. (1988) Iodine in milk and the incidence of thyrotoxicosis in England. Clin Endocrinol (Oxf) 28, 6166.Google Scholar
97. Food and Agriculture Organization (2014) FAOstat. http://www.faostat3.fao.org (accessed June 2015).Google Scholar
98. Zimmermann, MB (2009) Iodine deficiency. Endocr Rev 30, 376408.Google Scholar
99. Zimmermann, MB, Aeberli, I, Torresani, T, et al. (2005) Increasing the iodine concentration in the Swiss iodized salt program markedly improved iodine status in pregnant women and children: a 5-y prospective national study. Am J Clin Nutr 82, 388392.Google Scholar
100. Lim, KHC, Riddell, LJ, Nowson, CA, et al. (2013) Iron and zinc nutrition in the economically-developed world: a review. Nutrients 5, 31843211.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Fig. 1 Summary of the search and selection protocols used to identify papers included in the systematic review and the meta-analyses. * Review carried out by one reviewer; † data extraction carried out by two reviewers. CF, comparison of matched farms; BS, basket studies; EX, controlled experiments.

Figure 1

Fig. 2 Results of the standard meta-analyses and sensitivity analysis 1 for fat composition in cows’ milk. * Numerical values for mean percentage difference (MPD) and 95 % CI are given in the online Supplementary Table S9. † Significantly different between organic samples (ORG) and conventional samples (CONV) (P<0·05). ‡ Heterogeneity and the I2 statistic. § Ln ratio=Ln(ORG/CONV×100 %). || Calculated based on published fatty acid (FA) composition data. , MPD calculated using data included in sensitivity analysis 1; , MPD calculated using data included in standard meta-analysis; , standardised mean difference (smd) from the standard meta-analysis with 95 % CI represented by horizontal bars. n, number of data points included in meta-analyses; OA, oleic acid; VA, vaccenic acid; CLA, conjugated linoleic acid; ALA, α-linolenic acid; VLC n-3 PUFA, very long-chain n-3 PUFA (EPA+DPA+DHA); LA, linoleic acid; AA, arachidonic acid.

Figure 2

Fig. 3 Results of the standard meta-analyses and sensitivity analysis 1 for antioxidants, minerals, urea and somatic cell count (SCC) in cows’ milk. * Numerical values for mean percentage difference (MPD) and 95 % CI are given in the online Supplementary Table S9. † Significantly different between organic samples (ORG) and conventional samples (CONV) (P<0·05). ‡ Heterogeneity and the I2 statistic. § Ln ratio=Ln(ORG/CONV×100 %). || Calculated based on published fatty acid composition data. , MPD calculated using data included in sensitivity analysis 1; , MPD calculated using data included in standard meta-analysis; , standardised mean difference (smd) from the standard meta-analysis with 95 % CI represented by horizontal bars; n, number of data points included in meta-analyses.

Figure 3

Table 1 Grading of Recommendation Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) assessment of the strength of evidence for standard meta-analysis for parameters shown in Fig. 2 and 3 (Standardised mean difference values (smd) and 95 % confidence intervals)

Figure 4

Fig. 4 Summary of data presented in papers included in the standard meta-analysis for concentration of (a) total conjugated linoleic acid (CLA), (b) n-3 fatty acids (FA) and (c) PUFA content in cows’ milk. Values are means with, their standard errors for conventional () and organic () production system. Significant correlation: * P≤0·05; ** P≤0·01; *** P≤0·001; NS not significant; NR not reported. On x-axis country code according ISO 3166-2 (see http://www.iso.org/iso/home/standards/country_codes.htm) and study ID in parentheses (see the online Supplementary Table S1 for references). † Paper not included in standard meta-analysis for which values for measures of variance were obtained directly from authors.

Figure 5

Fig. 5 Bi-plot derived from the redundancy analysis showing the relationship between milk composition parameters (fatty acids () and antioxidants ()) and cows’ feeding and rearing parameters (categorical explanatory variables (, )) and quantitative explanatory variables (). 6:3, n-3:n-6 Fatty acid ratio; 2R, synthetic isomers of α-tocopherol; 3R, natural isomers of α-tocopherol; BC, β-carotene; BI, breed index; CLA9, rumenic acid (cis-9,trans-11-18 : 2); CO, concentrate feeds; CONV, conventional production system; GA, grazing intake; GS, grass silage; H/S, hay or straw; LA, linoleic acid (cis-9,12-18 : 2); LU, lutein; LR, lauristic acid (12 : 0); MA, myristic acid (14 : 0); MS, maize silage; OA, oleic acid (cis-9-18 : 1); ORG, organic production system; OS, other silage; PA, palmitic acid (16 : 0); SA, stearic acid (18 : 0); VA, vaccenic acid (trans-11-18 : 1); ZE, zeaxanthin.

Supplementary material: File

Średnicka-Tober supplementary material

Appendix

Download Średnicka-Tober supplementary material(File)
File 94.9 KB
Supplementary material: File

Średnicka-Tober supplementary material

Średnicka-Tober supplementary material 1

Download Średnicka-Tober supplementary material(File)
File 2 MB