Freitas-Vilela Ana Amélia, Smith Andrew D A C, Kac Gilberto, Pearson Rebecca M, Heron Jon, Emond Alan, Hibbeln Joseph R, Castro Maria Beatriz Trindade, Emmett Pauline M
Nutritional Epidemiology Observatory, Department of Social and Applied Nutrition, Institute of Nutrition Josué de Castro, Rio de Janeiro Federal University, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
School of Social and Community Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Matern Child Nutr. 2017 Apr;13(2). doi: 10.1111/mcn.12353. Epub 2016 Oct 9.
Little is known about how dietary patterns of mothers and their children track over time. The objectives of this study are to obtain dietary patterns in pregnancy using cluster analysis, to examine women's mean nutrient intakes in each cluster and to compare the dietary patterns of mothers to those of their children. Pregnant women (n = 12 195) from the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children reported their frequency of consumption of 47 foods and food groups. These data were used to obtain dietary patterns during pregnancy by cluster analysis. The absolute and energy-adjusted nutrient intakes were compared between clusters. Women's dietary patterns were compared with previously derived clusters of their children at 7 years of age. Multinomial logistic regression was performed to evaluate relationships comparing maternal and offspring clusters. Three maternal clusters were identified: 'fruit and vegetables', 'meat and potatoes' and 'white bread and coffee'. After energy adjustment women in the 'fruit and vegetables' cluster had the highest mean nutrient intakes. Mothers in the 'fruit and vegetables' cluster were more likely than mothers in 'meat and potatoes' (adjusted odds ratio [OR]: 2.00; 95% Confidence Interval [CI]: 1.69-2.36) or 'white bread and coffee' (OR: 2.18; 95% CI: 1.87-2.53) clusters to have children in a 'plant-based' cluster. However the majority of children were in clusters unrelated to their mother dietary pattern. Three distinct dietary patterns were obtained in pregnancy; the 'fruit and vegetables' pattern being the most nutrient dense. Mothers' dietary patterns were associated with but did not dominate offspring dietary patterns.
关于母亲及其子女的饮食模式如何随时间变化,人们了解甚少。本研究的目的是通过聚类分析得出孕期的饮食模式,研究每个聚类中女性的平均营养素摄入量,并比较母亲与子女的饮食模式。来自雅芳亲子纵向研究的12195名孕妇报告了她们对47种食物和食物组的消费频率。这些数据用于通过聚类分析得出孕期的饮食模式。比较了各聚类之间的绝对营养素摄入量和能量调整后的营养素摄入量。将女性的饮食模式与其子女7岁时先前得出的聚类进行了比较。进行多项逻辑回归以评估比较母亲和后代聚类之间的关系。确定了三种母亲聚类:“水果和蔬菜”、“肉类和土豆”以及“白面包和咖啡”。能量调整后,“水果和蔬菜”聚类中的女性平均营养素摄入量最高。“水果和蔬菜”聚类中的母亲比“肉类和土豆”聚类(调整后的优势比[OR]:2.00;95%置信区间[CI]:1.69 - 2.36)或“白面包和咖啡”聚类(OR:2.18;95%CI:1.87 - 2.53)中的母亲更有可能生育处于“植物性”聚类中的子女。然而,大多数子女所处的聚类与母亲的饮食模式无关。孕期获得了三种不同的饮食模式;“水果和蔬菜”模式的营养密度最高。母亲的饮食模式与子女的饮食模式有关,但并不主导子女的饮食模式。