Loading…

Comparison of different nutrient profiling schemes to a new reference method using dietary surveys

A new EU regulation on nutrition and health claims made on foods has entered into force in January 2007. The regulation provides for the use of nutrient profiles to determine which foods may bear claims but does not specify what the profiles should be or how they should be developed. Several nutrien...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:European journal of nutrition 2007-12, Vol.46 (S2), p.37-46
Main Authors: Quinio, Caroline, Biltoft-Jensen, Anja, De Henauw, Stefaan, Gibney, Michael J, Huybrechts, Inge, McCarthy, Sinéad N, O'Neill, Jennifer L, Tetens, Inge, Turrini, Aida, Volatier, Jean-Luc
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:A new EU regulation on nutrition and health claims made on foods has entered into force in January 2007. The regulation provides for the use of nutrient profiles to determine which foods may bear claims but does not specify what the profiles should be or how they should be developed. Several nutrient profiling schemes have already been established. Therefore, it is necessary to develop approaches to test if the existing profiling schemes could fulfil the new regulation needs. The aim of the present study is to investigate how reference “indicator foods” derived from national dietary surveys in five different countries, are classified according to three existing nutrient profiling schemes: The UK Food Standards Agency (FSA) model, The Dutch Tripartite classification model and the US FDA model used for regulating health claims. “Indicator foods” that have been shown to be positively or negatively associated with healthy diets in adults in five EU countries were classified according to each of the three profiling schemes. The performance and effectiveness of each profiling scheme in correctly classifying the “indicator foods” were assessed using sensitivity and specificity ratios. The sensitivity and the specificity ratios of the three profiling schemes tested were relatively good. There were only small differences of performance between the three systems. A significant negative correlation between sensitivity and specificity was observed. The level of concordance between the classification of the “indicator foods” that have been selected because of being positively or negatively associated with a healthy diet and the classification by each of the three profiling methods tested was quite good. However, further improvement of the “indicator foods” approach is needed if it is to serve as a “gold standard”.
ISSN:1436-6207
1436-6215
DOI:10.1007/s00394-007-2005-4