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Article Dans Une Revue Proceedings of the Nutrition Society Année : 2017

Combining traditional dietary assessment methods with novel metabolomics techniques: present efforts by the Food Biomarker Alliance

1 Division of Human Nutrition
2 UCD School of Agriculture and Food Science
3 Department of Nutrition [Oslo]
4 Faculty of Medicine
5 UiO - University of Oslo
6 National Institute for Public Health and the Environment
7 UNH - Unité de Nutrition Humaine
8 Department of Nutrition, Exercise and Sports [Copenhagen]
9 UCD School of Public Health, Physiotherapy and Sports Science
10 Department of Nutrition, Food Sciences and Gastronomy
11 Department of Internal Medicine
12 University of Groningen [Groningen]
13 TNO,Netherlands Organisation for Applied Scientific Research
14 Department of Agricultural and Food Science
15 Department of Bioanalysis
16 UGENT - Universiteit Gent = Ghent University
17 Analytical Services
18 Institute of Public Health and Clinical Nutrition
19 University of Eastern Finland
20 Max Rubner-Institut
21 Department of Biology and Biological Engineering, food and Nutrition Sciences
22 Institute of Epidemiology II
23 Helmholtz Zentrum München = German Research Center for Environmental Health
24 Department of Food Quality and Nutrition,Research and Innovation
25 Department of Human Biology
26 MUMC - Maastricht University Medical Centre
27 CREA - Consiglio per la Ricerca in Agricoltura e l’analisi dell’economia agraria = Council for Agricultural Research and Economics
28 ZIEL Institute for Food and Health
29 TUM - Technische Universität Munchen - Technical University Munich - Université Technique de Munich
30 Division of Food,Disease Prevention and Toxicology
31 DTU - Danmarks Tekniske Universitet = Technical University of Denmark
32 Agroscope, Institute for Food Sciences
33 Departments of Biological Sciences and Computing Science
34 Section of Nutrition and Metabolism
Claudine Manach

Résumé

FFQ, food diaries and 24 h recall methods represent the most commonly used dietary assessment tools in human studies on nutrition and health, but food intake biomarkers are assumed to provide a more objective reflection of intake. Unfortunately, very few of these biomarkers are sufficiently validated. This review provides an overview of food intake biomarker research and highlights present research efforts of the Joint Programming Initiative 'A Healthy Diet for a Healthy Life' (JPI-HDHL) Food Biomarkers Alliance (FoodBAll). In order to identify novel food intake biomarkers, the focus is on new food metabolomics techniques that allow the quantification of up to thousands of metabolites simultaneously, which may be applied in intervention and observational studies. As biomarkers are often influenced by various other factors than the food under investigation, FoodBAll developed a food intake biomarker quality and validity score aiming to assist the systematic evaluation of novel biomarkers. Moreover, to evaluate the applicability of nutritional biomarkers, studies are presently also focusing on associations between food intake biomarkers and diet-related disease risk. In order to be successful in these metabolomics studies, knowledge about available electronic metabolomics resources is necessary and further developments of these resources are essential. Ultimately, present efforts in this research area aim to advance quality control of traditional dietary assessment methods, advance compliance evaluation in nutritional intervention studies, and increase the significance of observational studies by investigating associations between nutrition and health.

Dates et versions

hal-01656659 , version 1 (05-12-2017)

Identifiants

Citer

E. M. Brouwer-Brolsma, L. Brennan, C. A. Drevon, H. van Kranen, Claudine Manach, et al.. Combining traditional dietary assessment methods with novel metabolomics techniques: present efforts by the Food Biomarker Alliance. Proceedings of the Nutrition Society, 2017, 76 (4), pp.619-627. ⟨10.1017/s0029665117003949⟩. ⟨hal-01656659⟩
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