Literature DB >> 23443832

Nutritional epidemiology: New perspectives for understanding the diet-disease relationship?

H Boeing1.   

Abstract

Nutritional epidemiology is a subdiscipline of epidemiology and provides specific knowledge to nutritional science. It provides data about the diet-disease relationships that is transformed by Public Health Nutrition into the practise of prevention. The specific contributions of nutritional epidemiology include dietary assessment, description of nutritional exposure and statistical modelling of the diet-disease relationship. In all these areas, substantial progress has been made over the last years and is described in this article. Dietary assessment is moving away from the food frequency questionnaire (FFQ) as main dietary assessment instrument in large-scale epidemiological studies towards the use of short-term quantitative instruments due to the potential of gross measurement errors. Web-based instruments for self-administration are therefore evaluated of being able to replace the costly interviewer conducted 24-h-recalls. Much interest is also directed towards the technique of taking and analysing photographs of all meals ingested, which might improve the dietary assessment in terms of precision. The description of nutritional exposure could greatly benefit from standardisation of the coding of foods across studies in order to improve comparability. For the investigations of bioactive substances as reflecting nutritional intake and status, the investigation of concentration measurements in body fluids as potential biomarkers will benefit from the new high-throughput technologies of mass spectrometry. Statistical modelling of the dietary data and the diet-disease relationships can refer to complex programmes that convert quantitative short-term measurements into habitual intakes of individuals and correct for the errors in the estimates of the diet-disease relationships by taking data from validation studies with biomarkers into account. For dietary data, substitution modelling should be preferred over simple adding modelling. More attention should also be put on the investigation of non-linear relationships. The increasing complexity of the conduct and analysis of nutritional epidemiological studies is calling for a distinct and advanced training programme for the young scientists moving into this area. This will also guarantee that in the future an increasing number of high-level manuscripts will show up in this and other journals in respect of nutritional epidemiological topics.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23443832     DOI: 10.1038/ejcn.2013.47

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Clin Nutr        ISSN: 0954-3007            Impact factor:   4.016


  32 in total

1.  Diet-related inflammation and risk of prostate cancer in the California Men's Health Study.

Authors:  Daria M McMahon; James B Burch; James R Hébert; James W Hardin; Jiajia Zhang; Michael D Wirth; Shawn D Youngstedt; Nitin Shivappa; Steven J Jacobsen; Bette Caan; Stephen K Van Den Eeden
Journal:  Ann Epidemiol       Date:  2018-11-02       Impact factor: 3.797

2.  Misreport of energy intake assessed with food records and 24-h recalls compared with total energy expenditure estimated with DLW.

Authors:  T S Lopes; R R Luiz; D J Hoffman; E Ferriolli; K Pfrimer; A S Moura; R Sichieri; R A Pereira
Journal:  Eur J Clin Nutr       Date:  2016-06-08       Impact factor: 4.016

Review 3.  The Importance and Challenges of Dietary Intervention Trials for Inflammatory Bowel Disease.

Authors:  James D Lewis; Lindsey Albenberg; Dale Lee; Mario Kratz; Klaus Gottlieb; Walter Reinisch
Journal:  Inflamm Bowel Dis       Date:  2017-02       Impact factor: 5.325

4.  Redox Systems Biology of Nutrition and Oxidative Stress.

Authors:  Kristine K Dennis; Young-Mi Go; Dean P Jones
Journal:  J Nutr       Date:  2019-04-01       Impact factor: 4.798

5.  Perspective: Randomized Controlled Trials Are Not a Panacea for Diet-Related Research.

Authors:  James R Hébert; Edward A Frongillo; Swann A Adams; Gabrielle M Turner-McGrievy; Thomas G Hurley; Donald R Miller; Ira S Ockene
Journal:  Adv Nutr       Date:  2016-05-16       Impact factor: 8.701

6.  The Mediterranean diet and physical activity: better together than apart for the prevention of premature mortality.

Authors:  Maria Soledad Hershey; Miguel Ángel Martínez-González; Ismael Álvarez-Álvarez; José Alfredo Martínez Hernández; Miguel Ruiz-Canela
Journal:  Br J Nutr       Date:  2021-08-31       Impact factor: 4.125

7.  Dietary protein intake and kidney function decline after myocardial infarction: the Alpha Omega Cohort.

Authors:  Kevin Esmeijer; Johanna M Geleijnse; Johan W de Fijter; Daan Kromhout; Ellen K Hoogeveen
Journal:  Nephrol Dial Transplant       Date:  2020-01-01       Impact factor: 7.186

8.  Obese individuals do not underreport dietary intake to a greater extent than nonobese individuals when data are allometrically-scaled.

Authors:  Sally P Waterworth; Catherine J Kerr; Christopher J McManus; Rianne Costello; Gavin R H Sandercock
Journal:  Am J Hum Biol       Date:  2022-03-08       Impact factor: 2.947

9.  Fruits and vegetables intake and gastric cancer risk: A pooled analysis within the Stomach cancer Pooling Project.

Authors:  Ana Ferro; Ana Rute Costa; Samantha Morais; Paola Bertuccio; Matteo Rota; Claudio Pelucchi; Jinfu Hu; Kenneth C Johnson; Zuo-Feng Zhang; Domenico Palli; Monica Ferraroni; Guo-Pei Yu; Rossella Bonzi; Bárbara Peleteiro; Lizbeth López-Carrillo; Shoichiro Tsugane; Gerson Shigueaki Hamada; Akihisa Hidaka; Reza Malekzadeh; David Zaridze; Dmitry Maximovich; Jesus Vioque; Eva M Navarrete-Muñoz; Juan Alguacil; Gemma Castaño-Vinyals; Alicja Wolk; Niclas Håkansson; Raúl Ulises Hernández-Ramírez; Mohammadreza Pakseresht; Mary H Ward; Farhad Pourfarzi; Lina Mu; Malaquias López-Cervantes; Roberto Persiani; Robert C Kurtz; Areti Lagiou; Pagona Lagiou; Paolo Boffetta; Stefania Boccia; Eva Negri; Maria Constanza Camargo; Maria Paula Curado; Carlo La Vecchia; Nuno Lunet
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  2020-06-29       Impact factor: 7.316

10.  Meat intake and risk of gastric cancer in the Stomach cancer Pooling (StoP) project.

Authors:  Ana Ferro; Valentina Rosato; Matteo Rota; Ana Rute Costa; Samantha Morais; Claudio Pelucchi; Kenneth C Johnson; Jinfu Hu; Domenico Palli; Monica Ferraroni; Zuo-Feng Zhang; Rossella Bonzi; Guo-Pei Yu; Bárbara Peleteiro; Lizbeth López-Carrillo; Shoichiro Tsugane; Gerson Shigueaki Hamada; Akihisa Hidaka; David Zaridze; Dmitry Maximovitch; Jesus Vioque; Eva M Navarrete-Munoz; Nuria Aragonés; Vicente Martín; Raúl Ulisses Hernández-Ramírez; Paola Bertuccio; Mary H Ward; Reza Malekzadeh; Farhad Pourfarzi; Lina Mu; Malaquias López-Cervantes; Roberto Persiani; Robert C Kurtz; Areti Lagiou; Pagona Lagiou; Paolo Boffetta; Stefania Boccia; Eva Negri; M Constanza Camargo; Maria Paula Curado; Carlo La Vecchia; Nuno Lunet
Journal:  Int J Cancer       Date:  2019-11-22       Impact factor: 7.316

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