School of Health Sciences, College of Health Medicine and Wellbeing, The University of Newcastle, Callaghan, New South Wales, Australia.
Food and Nutrition Research Program, Hunter Medical Research Institute, New Lambton Heights, New South Wales, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2023 Jul 31;13(7):e073658. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-073658.
Traditional dietary assessment methods such as 24-hour recalls and food frequency questionnaires rely on self-reported data and are prone to error, bias and inaccuracy. Identification of dietary metabolites associated with different dietary patterns can provide objective markers of whole diet patterns that account for metabolism and individual responses to dietary interventions. Additionally, few studies have investigated country-specific healthy and unhealthy dietary patterns using metabolomics. Therefore, the current study aims to identify urinary and plasma metabolites that characterise a 'healthy' (aligned with current national dietary guidelines) and an 'unhealthy' dietary pattern (Typical Australian Diet) in Australian adults.
The Diet Quality Feeding Study (DQFS) is an 8-week cross-over feeding study that will recruit 40 healthy adults from the Hunter region (NSW, Australia). Data collected includes biospecimens (whole blood, urine, stool) for quantification of dietary metabolite biomarkers; questionnaires (medical history/demographic, physical activity, quality of life); physical measures (anthropometry, body composition, waist circumference, blood pressure, arterial pressure); skin carotenoids and dietary intake (24-hour recalls, food frequency questionnaire). Participants will attend the research facility every 2 weeks (end of the run-in, each diet intervention and washout period) for collection of physical measures. All food will be provided to participants for each dietary intervention period, and participants will return to their usual diet during the run-in and washout periods. Targeted and untargeted metabolomics using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry and/or proton nuclear magnetic resonance (1H-NMR) spectroscopy will be used to identify metabolites in biospecimens associated with dietary intake.
This study is approved by the Hunter New England Human Research Ethics Committee (HNEHREC; 2022/ETH01649) and the University of Newcastle's Human Research Ethics Committee (HREC; H-2022-0330). Findings will be disseminated to study participants, funding bodies supporting the DQFS, peer-review publications and presented at scientific conferences within the field of research.
Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry (ACTRN12622001321730).
传统的饮食评估方法,如 24 小时回顾法和食物频率问卷,依赖于自我报告的数据,容易出现错误、偏差和不准确。鉴定与不同饮食模式相关的饮食代谢产物,可以为整个饮食模式提供客观的标志物,这些标志物可以反映代谢和个体对饮食干预的反应。此外,很少有研究使用代谢组学来调查特定国家的健康和不健康的饮食模式。因此,本研究旨在鉴定与澳大利亚成年人的“健康”(与当前国家饮食指南一致)和“不健康”(典型澳大利亚饮食)饮食模式相关的尿和血浆代谢产物。
饮食质量喂养研究(DQFS)是一项为期 8 周的交叉喂养研究,将从新南威尔士州亨特地区(澳大利亚)招募 40 名健康成年人。收集的数据包括生物样本(全血、尿液、粪便)以定量测定饮食代谢产物生物标志物;调查问卷(病史/人口统计学、身体活动、生活质量);身体测量(人体测量、身体成分、腰围、血压、动脉压);皮肤类胡萝卜素和饮食摄入(24 小时回顾、食物频率问卷)。参与者将每 2 周(运行期结束、每种饮食干预和洗脱期)到研究机构采集身体测量数据。将为每位参与者提供每种饮食干预期的所有食物,参与者将在运行期和洗脱期恢复到正常饮食。使用液相色谱-质谱联用和/或质子核磁共振(1H-NMR)光谱法进行靶向和非靶向代谢组学,以鉴定生物样本中与饮食摄入相关的代谢产物。
这项研究得到了亨特新英格兰人类研究伦理委员会(HNEHREC;2022/ETH01649)和纽卡斯尔大学人类研究伦理委员会(HREC;H-2022-0330)的批准。研究结果将传播给研究参与者、资助 DQFS 的机构、同行评审出版物,并在该研究领域的科学会议上展示。
澳大利亚新西兰临床试验注册中心(ACTRN12622001321730)。