Metabotyping for the development of tailored dietary advice solutions in a European population: the Food4Me study

Author:

O’Donovan Clare B.,Walsh Marianne C.,Woolhead Clara,Forster Hannah,Celis-Morales Carlos,Fallaize RosalindORCID,Macready Anna L.,Marsaux Cyril F. M.,Navas-Carretero Santiago,Rodrigo San-Cristobal S.,Kolossa Silvia,Tsirigoti Lydia,Mvrogianni Christina,Lambrinou Christina P.,Moschonis George,Godlewska Magdalena,Surwillo Agnieszka,Traczyk Iwona,Drevon Christian A.,Daniel Hannelore,Manios Yannis,Martinez J. Alfredo,Saris Wim H. M.,Lovegrove Julie A.,Mathers John C.,Gibney Michael J.,Gibney Eileen R.,Brennan Lorraine

Abstract

AbstractTraditionally, personalised nutrition was delivered at an individual level. However, the concept of delivering tailored dietary advice at a group level through the identification of metabotypes or groups of metabolically similar individuals has emerged. Although this approach to personalised nutrition looks promising, further work is needed to examine this concept across a wider population group. Therefore, the objectives of this study are to: (1) identify metabotypes in a European population and (2) develop targeted dietary advice solutions for these metabotypes. Using data from the Food4Me study (n 1607), k-means cluster analysis revealed the presence of three metabolically distinct clusters based on twenty-seven metabolic markers including cholesterol, individual fatty acids and carotenoids. Cluster 2 was identified as a metabolically healthy metabotype as these individuals had the highest Omega-3 Index (6·56 (sd 1·29) %), carotenoids (2·15 (sd 0·71) µm) and lowest total saturated fat levels. On the basis of its fatty acid profile, cluster 1 was characterised as a metabolically unhealthy cluster. Targeted dietary advice solutions were developed per cluster using a decision tree approach. Testing of the approach was performed by comparison with the personalised dietary advice, delivered by nutritionists to Food4Me study participants (n 180). Excellent agreement was observed between the targeted and individualised approaches with an average match of 82 % at the level of delivery of the same dietary message. Future work should ascertain whether this proposed method could be utilised in a healthcare setting, for the rapid and efficient delivery of tailored dietary advice solutions.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Nutrition and Dietetics,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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