Representing Diet in a Tree-Based Format for Interactive and Exploratory Assessment of Dietary Intake Data

Archive ouverte

Litwin, Nicole | Cantrell, Kalen | Cotillard, Aurelie | Derrien, Muriel | Johnson, Abigail | Knight, Rob | Lejzerowicz, Franck | Mcdonald, Daniel | Nowinski, Brent | Song, Se Jin | Tap, Julien | Veiga, Patrick

Edité par CCSD ; American Society for Nutrition -

International audience. Abstract Objectives We assessed the utility of representing dietary intake data in hierarchical tree structures that consider relationships among foods. Methods Dietary intake was collected from 1909 adults (≥18 years) using a food frequency questionnaire (FFQ; VioScreen) from the American Gut Project. FFQ food items were formatted into hierarchical tree structures based on 1) USDA's Food Nutrient and Database for Dietary Studies (FNDDS) classifications, 2) nutrient content, and 3) molecular compound information detected via mass spectrometry to capture the non-nutrient composition of foods. Next, we compared how well representing dissimilarities (or distances) between individuals based on their diet corresponded with indices such as the Healthy Eating Index (HEI-2015), when those distances are calculated using tree-based versus non-tree-based metrics. We performed an Adonis test (PERMANOVA) to measure the amount of variation explained (R2) in these diet-based distances by HEI-2015. Results We observed that dietary ordinations generated using tree-based relationships between foods have better agreement with HEI than ordinations generated without considering relatedness between foods. The variation explained by HEI-2015 increased by 35% when using the FNDDS tree compared to using a non-tree based quantitative metric (Bray-Curtis (not tree-based) R2 = 0.02931 vs. Weighted UniFrac (tree-based) R2 = 0.03969), by >20% when using the nutrient tree (vs. Weighted UniFrac R2 = 0.03627), and only marginally (6%) when using the molecular compound tree (vs. Weighted UniFrac R2 = 0.03116). Conclusions We show that tree-based measurements of dietary similarity lead to better agreement with diet indices (e.g., HEI) than when relationships among foods are not considered. We also show that representing dietary intake in a tree-like structure can offer interactive visualizations of data that can be used to inform hypotheses regarding dietary characteristics. Funding Sources Danone Nutricia Research.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

A posteriori dietary patterns better explain variations of the gut microbiome than individual markers in the American Gut Project

Archive ouverte | Cotillard, Aurélie | CCSD

International audience. ABSTRACT Background Individual diet components and specific dietary regimens have been shown to impact the gut microbiome. Objectives Here, we explored the contribution of long-term diet by s...

Consumption of Fermented Foods Is Associated with Systematic Differences in the Gut Microbiome and Metabolome

Archive ouverte | Taylor, Bryn, C | CCSD

International audience. Public interest in the effects of fermented food on the human gut microbiome is high, but limited studies have explored the association between fermented food consumption and the gut microbio...

Global branches and local states of the human gut microbiome define associations with environmental and intrinsic factors

Archive ouverte | Tap, Julien | CCSD

International audience. The gut microbiome is important for human health, yet modulation requires more insight into inter-individual variation. Here, we explored latent structures of the human gut microbiome across ...

Chargement des enrichissements...