Litcius/Paper detail

Associations of Diet with Health Outcomes in the UK Biobank: A Systematic Review

Hana Fitria Navratilova, S. A. Lanham‐New, Anthony D. Whetton, Nophar Geifman

2024Nutrients29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The UK Biobank is a cohort study that collects data on diet, lifestyle, biomarkers, and health to examine diet-disease associations. Based on the UK Biobank, we reviewed 36 studies on diet and three health conditions: type 2 diabetes (T2DM), cardiovascular disease (CVD), and cancer. Most studies used one-time dietary data instead of repeated 24 h recalls, which may lead to measurement errors and bias in estimating diet-disease associations. We also found that most studies focused on single food groups or macronutrients, while few studies adopted a dietary pattern approach. Several studies consistently showed that eating more red and processed meat led to a higher risk of lung and colorectal cancer. The results suggest that high adherence to "healthy" dietary patterns (consuming various food types, with at least three servings/day of whole grain, fruits, and vegetables, and meat and processed meat less than twice a week) slightly lowers the risk of T2DM, CVD, and colorectal cancer. Future research should use multi-omics data and machine learning models to account for the complexity and interactions of dietary components and their effects on disease risk.

Topics & Concepts

BiobankDiseaseMedicineFood groupEnvironmental healthRed meatType 2 diabetesCohort studyCohortRefined grainsDiet and cancerColorectal cancerDiabetes mellitusGerontologyWhole grainsCancerBioinformaticsFood scienceBiologyInternal medicinePathologyEndocrinologyNutritional Studies and DietNutrition, Genetics, and DiseaseDiet and metabolism studies