Charles Perkins Centre, The University of Sydney, Camperdown, NSW, Australia.
J Hum Nutr Diet. 2021 Jun;34(3):511-523. doi: 10.1111/jhn.12841. Epub 2021 Jan 6.
Associations between diet and cardiometabolic outcomes are often based on a single measurement of diet in adulthood. Dietary exposures in childhood are thought to influence cardiometabolic disease development and individuals' diets can change over time, therefore dietary exposure in childhood and over long periods are both important to consider. This scoping review aimed to identify and characterise the literature on associations between diet measured in both childhood and adulthood and cardiometabolic outcomes. Seven databases were searched; eligible evidence sources were original analyses published as a journal article in English. Exposures included measures of dietary intake, diet quality and eating behaviours measured in both childhood and adulthood with at least five years between first and last measurements. Cardiometabolic outcomes included measures of anthropometry, biochemistry, vascular structure/function and disease states/scores. We identified 37 eligible articles from nine cohort studies. Dietary exposures were measured between two and eight times and most often assessed by food frequency questionnaire or diet history. The dietary exposures most frequently examined were protein, fat, carbohydrate, fruit, vegetables, sugar-sweetened beverages and breakfast. Cardiometabolic outcomes were predominantly based on risk markers. Authors utilised a variety of analytical approaches to transform and analyse repeated measures of diet, providing insights relevant to different lifespan nutrition concepts. The literature on associations between diet in childhood and adulthood and cardiometabolic outcomes is limited, but such studies have great potential to extend our knowledge in ways only possible with repeated measures of diet over time. Further research is needed to develop the evidence base for diet-disease relationships from a life course perspective, accounting for diet in both childhood and adulthood.
饮食与心脏代谢结果之间的关联通常基于成年人单次的饮食测量。儿童时期的饮食暴露被认为会影响心脏代谢疾病的发展,并且个体的饮食会随时间而变化,因此儿童时期和长期的饮食暴露都很重要。本范围综述旨在确定和描述在儿童期和成年期测量的饮食与心脏代谢结果之间的关联的文献。我们在七个数据库中进行了搜索;符合条件的证据来源是在英语期刊上发表的原始分析文章。暴露包括儿童期和成年期测量的饮食摄入、饮食质量和饮食行为的指标,且两次测量之间至少有五年的时间间隔。心脏代谢结果包括人体测量、生物化学、血管结构/功能和疾病状态/评分的指标。我们从九项队列研究中确定了 37 篇符合条件的文章。饮食暴露的测量次数在两次到八次之间,最常通过食物频率问卷或饮食史进行评估。最常检查的饮食暴露是蛋白质、脂肪、碳水化合物、水果、蔬菜、含糖饮料和早餐。心脏代谢结果主要基于风险标志物。作者采用了多种分析方法来转换和分析饮食的重复测量值,为不同生命周期的营养概念提供了相关见解。关于儿童期和成年期饮食与心脏代谢结果之间关联的文献有限,但此类研究具有很大的潜力,可以在时间上重复测量饮食的基础上扩展我们的知识。需要进一步的研究来从生命历程的角度发展基于饮食-疾病关系的证据基础,同时考虑儿童期和成年期的饮食。