Center for Public Health Nutrition, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA.
MS-Nutrition, Faculté de Médecine La Timone, CEDEX 5, 13385 Marseille, France.
Nutrients. 2022 Apr 2;14(7):1485. doi: 10.3390/nu14071485.
Existing metrics of carbohydrate food quality have been based, for the most part, on favorable fiber- and free sugar-to-carbohydrate ratios. In these metrics, higher nutritional quality carbohydrate foods are defined as those with >10% fiber and <10% free sugar per 100 g carbohydrate. Although fiber- and sugar-based metrics may help to differentiate the nutritional quality of various types of grain products, they may not aptly capture the nutritional quality of other healthy carbohydrate foods, including beans, legumes, vegetables, and fruits. Carbohydrate food quality metrics need to be applicable across these diverse food groups. This report introduces a new carbohydrate food scoring system known as a Carbohydrate Food Quality Score (CFQS), which supplements the fiber and free sugar components of previous metrics with additional dietary components of public health concern (e.g., sodium, potassium, and whole grains) as identified by the Dietary Guidelines for Americans. Two CFQS models are developed and tested in this study: one that includes four dietary components (CFQS-4: fiber, free sugars, sodium, potassium) and one that considers five dietary components (CFQS-5: fiber, free sugars, sodium, potassium, and whole grains). These models are applied to 2596 carbohydrate foods in the Food and Nutrient Database for Dietary Studies (FNDDS) 2017−2018. Consistent with past studies, the new carbohydrate food scoring system places large percentages of beans, vegetables, and fruits among the top scoring carbohydrate foods. The whole grain component, which only applies to grain foods (N = 1561), identifies ready-to-eat cereals, oatmeal, other cooked cereals, and selected whole grain breads and crackers as higher-quality carbohydrate foods. The new carbohydrate food scoring system shows a high correlation with the Nutrient Rich Food (NRF9.3) index and the Nutri-Score. Metrics of carbohydrate food quality that incorporate whole grains, potassium, and sodium, in addition to sugar and fiber, are strategically aligned with multiple 2020−2025 dietary recommendations and may therefore help with the implementation of present and future dietary guidelines.
现有的碳水化合物食物质量指标主要基于膳食纤维和游离糖与碳水化合物的比例,来定义高营养价值的碳水化合物食物,即每 100 克碳水化合物中含有>10%的膳食纤维和<10%的游离糖。虽然基于膳食纤维和糖的指标可以帮助区分不同类型谷物产品的营养价值,但它们可能无法准确反映豆类、豆类、蔬菜和水果等其他健康碳水化合物食物的营养价值。碳水化合物食物质量指标需要适用于这些不同的食物群体。本报告介绍了一种新的碳水化合物食物评分系统,称为碳水化合物食物质量评分(CFQS),它在以前的指标中添加了膳食纤维和游离糖成分,并补充了美国人膳食指南中确定的其他公共卫生关注的饮食成分(如钠、钾和全谷物)。本研究开发并测试了两种 CFQS 模型:一种包含四个饮食成分(CFQS-4:膳食纤维、游离糖、钠、钾),另一种考虑了五个饮食成分(CFQS-5:膳食纤维、游离糖、钠、钾和全谷物)。将这些模型应用于 2017-2018 年食品和营养素数据库中的 2596 种碳水化合物食物(FNDDS)。与过去的研究一致,新的碳水化合物食物评分系统将豆类、蔬菜和水果的大部分归类为高评分的碳水化合物食物。全谷物成分仅适用于谷物食品(N=1561),将即食谷物、燕麦片、其他煮过的谷物以及一些全麦面包和薄脆饼干识别为更高质量的碳水化合物食物。新的碳水化合物食物评分系统与营养素丰富食物(NRF9.3)指数和 Nutri-Score 高度相关。除了糖和纤维之外,还包含全谷物、钾和钠的碳水化合物食物质量指标与 2020-2025 年的多个饮食建议策略一致,因此可能有助于实施当前和未来的饮食指南。