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Time of Dietary Energy and Nutrient Intake and Body Mass Index in Children: Compositional Data Analysis from the Childhood Obesity Project (CHOP) Trial.

Vanessa JaegerBerthold V KoletzkoVerónica LuqueMariona Gispert-LlauradóDariusz GruszfeldPiotr SochaElvira VerduciGian Vincenzo ZuccottiLouise EtienneChristine Prell
Published in: Nutrients (2022)
Meal timing is suggested to influence the obesity risk in children. Our aim was to analyse the effect of energy and nutrient distributions at eating occasions (EO), including breakfast, lunch, supper, and snacks, on the BMI z-score (zBMI) during childhood in 729 healthy children. BMI and three-day dietary protocols were obtained at 3, 4, 5, 6, and 8 years of age, and dietary data were analysed as the percentage of the mean total energy intake (TEI; %E). Intakes at EOs were transformed via an isometric log-ratio transformation and added as exposure variables to linear mixed-effects models. Stratified analyses by country and recategorization of EOs by adding intake from snacks to respective meals for further analyses were performed. The exclusion of subjects with less than three observations and the exclusion of subjects who skipped one EO or consumed 5% energy or less at one EO were examined in sensitivity analyses. Around 23% of the children were overweight at a given time point. Overweight and normal-weight children showed different distributions of dietary intakes over the day; overweight children consumed higher intakes at lunch and lower intakes of snacks. However, no significant effects of timing of EOs on zBMI were found in regression analyses.
Keyphrases
  • weight gain
  • body mass index
  • young adults
  • weight loss
  • physical activity
  • data analysis
  • type diabetes
  • metabolic syndrome
  • adipose tissue
  • big data
  • skeletal muscle
  • body composition
  • early life
  • monte carlo