Assessing Adherence to Healthy Dietary Habits Through the Urinary Food MetabolomeResults From a European Two-Center Study

Authors Organisations
  • Pol Castellano-Escuder(Author)
    Autonomous University of Barcelona
    Carlos III Health Institute
  • Raúl González-Domínguez(Author)
    Autonomous University of Barcelona
    Carlos III Health Institute
  • Marie France Vaillant(Author)
    Inserm1055
    pôle thorax et vaisseaux
  • Patricia Casas-Agustench(Author)
    Autonomous University of Barcelona
    Carlos III Health Institute
  • Nicole Hidalgo-Liberona(Author)
    Autonomous University of Barcelona
    Carlos III Health Institute
  • Núria Estanyol-Torres(Author)
    Autonomous University of Barcelona
    Carlos III Health Institute
  • Thomas Wilson(Author)
  • Manfred Beckmann(Author)
  • Amanda Lloyd(Author)
  • Marion Oberli(Author)
    Groupe SEB
  • Christophe Moinard(Author)
    Inserm1055
  • Christophe Pison(Author)
    Inserm1055
    pôle thorax et vaisseaux
    Université Grenoble 1
  • Jean Christian Borel(Author)
    Inserm1055
  • Marie Joyeux-Faure(Author)
    IC@dom.
  • Mariette Sicard(Author)
    Groupe SEB
  • Svetlana Artemova(Author)
    pôle thorax et vaisseaux
  • Hugo Terrisse(Author)
    Inserm1055
    Université Grenoble 1
  • Paul Dancer(Author)
    Groupe SEB
  • John Draper(Author)
  • Alex Sánchez-Pla(Author)
    Carlos III Health Institute
    Autonomous University of Barcelona
  • Cristina Andres-Lacueva(Author)
    Autonomous University of Barcelona
    Carlos III Health Institute
Type Article
Original languageEnglish
Article number880770
Number of pages11
JournalFrontiers in Nutrition
Volume9
DOI
Publication statusPublished - 09 Jun 2022
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Abstract

Background: Diet is one of the most important modifiable lifestyle factors in human health and in chronic disease prevention. Thus, accurate dietary assessment is essential for reliably evaluating adherence to healthy habits. Objectives: The aim of this study was to identify urinary metabolites that could serve as robust biomarkers of diet quality, as assessed through the Alternative Healthy Eating Index (AHEI-2010). Design: We set up two-center samples of 160 healthy volunteers, aged between 25 and 50, living as a couple or family, with repeated urine sampling and dietary assessment at baseline, and 6 and 12 months over a year. Urine samples were subjected to large-scale metabolomics analysis for comprehensive quantitative characterization of the food-related metabolome. Then, lasso regularized regression analysis and limma univariate analysis were applied to identify those metabolites associated with the AHEI-2010, and to investigate the reproducibility of these associations over time. Results: Several polyphenol microbial metabolites were found to be positively associated with the AHEI-2010 score; urinary enterolactone glucuronide showed a reproducible association at the three study time points [false discovery rate (FDR): 0.016, 0.014, 0.016]. Furthermore, other associations were found between the AHEI-2010 and various metabolites related to the intake of coffee, red meat and fish, whereas other polyphenol phase II metabolites were associated with higher AHEI-2010 scores at one of the three time points investigated (FDR < 0.05 or β ≠ 0). Conclusion: We have demonstrated that urinary metabolites, and particularly microbiota-derived metabolites, could serve as reliable indicators of adherence to healthy dietary habits. Clinical Trail Registration: www.ClinicalTrials.gov, Identifier: NCT03169088.

Keywords

  • Alternative Healthy Eating Index (AHEI-2010), diet quality, dietary assessment, metabolomics, microbiota

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