Dietary patterns and associations with body mass index in low-income, ethnic minority youth in the United States according to baseline data from four randomized controlled trials
Few studies have derived data-driven dietary patterns in youth in the United States (US). This study examined data-driven dietary patterns and their associations with BMI measures in predominantly low-income, racial/ethnic minority US youth. Data were from baseline assessments of the four Childhood...
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Veröffentlicht in: | British journal of nutrition 2020-09, Vol.126 (1), p.81-91 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Few studies have derived data-driven dietary patterns in youth in the
United States (US). This study examined data-driven dietary patterns and their
associations with BMI measures in predominantly low-income, racial/ethnic
minority US youth. Data were from baseline assessments of the four Childhood
Obesity Prevention and Treatment Research (COPTR) Consortium trials: NET-Works
(
N
=534; 2–4-year-olds), GROW
(
N
=610; 3–5-year-olds), GOALS (
N
=241;
7–11-year-olds), and IMPACT (
N
=360;
10–13-year-olds). Weight and height were measured. Children/adult proxies
completed 3 24-hour dietary recalls. Dietary patterns were derived for each site
from 24 food/beverage groups using k-means cluster analysis. Multivariable
linear regression models examined associations of dietary patterns with BMI and
percentage of the 95
th
BMI percentile. Healthy (produce and whole
grains) and Unhealthy (fried food, savory snacks, and desserts) patterns were
found in NET-Works and GROW. GROW additionally had a dairy and sugar-sweetened
beverage based pattern. GOALS had a similar Healthy pattern and a pattern
resembling a traditional Mexican diet. Associations between dietary patterns and
BMI were only observed in IMPACT. In IMPACT, youth in the Sandwich (cold cuts,
refined grains, cheese, and miscellaneous [e.g., condiments]) compared to Mixed
(whole grains and desserts) cluster had significantly higher BMI [β=0.99
(95% CI: 0.01, 1.97)] and percentage of the 95
th
BMI percentile
[β=4.17 (95% CI: 0.11, 8.24)]. Healthy and Unhealthy patterns were the
most common dietary patterns in COPTR youth, but diets may differ according to
age, race/ethnicity, or geographic location. Public health messages focused on
healthy dietary substitutions may help youth mimic a dietary pattern associated
with lower BMI. |
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ISSN: | 0007-1145 1475-2662 |
DOI: | 10.1017/S0007114520003852 |