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Temporal Eating Patterns and Eating Windows among Adults with Overweight or Obesity

Collin Popp, Margaret Curran, Chan Wang, Malini Prasad, Keenan Fine, Allen Gee, Nandini Nair, Katherine Perdomo, Shirley Chen, Lu Hu, David E. St‐Jules, Emily N. C. Manoogian, Satchidananda Panda, Mary Ann Sevick, Blandine Laferrère

2021Nutrients38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

We aim to describe temporal eating patterns in a population of adults with overweight or obesity. In this cross-sectional analysis, data were combined from two separate pilot studies during which participants entered the timing of all eating occasions (>0 kcals) for 10–14 days. Data were aggregated to determine total eating occasions, local time of the first and last eating occasions, eating window, eating midpoint, and within-person variability of eating patterns. Eating patterns were compared between sexes, as well as between weekday and weekends. Participants (n = 85) had a median age of 56 ± 19 years, were mostly female (>70%), white (56.5%), and had a BMI of 31.8 ± 8.0 kg/m2. The median eating window was 14 h 04 min [12 h 57 min–15 h 21 min], which was significantly shorter on the weekend compared to weekdays (p < 0.0001). Only 13.1% of participants had an eating window <12 h/d. Additionally, there was greater irregularity with the first eating occasion during the week when compared to the weekend (p = 0.0002). In conclusion, adults with overweight or obesity have prolonged eating windows (>14 h/d). Future trials should examine the contribution of a prolonged eating window on adiposity independent of energy intake.

Topics & Concepts

OverweightObesityMedicineDemographyPopulationEmotional eatingEating behaviorGerontologyPsychologyInternal medicineEnvironmental healthSociologyDietary Effects on HealthCircadian rhythm and melatoninDiet and metabolism studies
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