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Aligning nutrient profiling with dietary guidelines: modifying the Nutri-Score algorithm to include whole grains

Authors :
Nicola M. McKeown
Kevin C. Mathias
Chris J. Seal
Adam Drewnowski
Heddie Mejborn
Eleanor J Beck
Jessica Smith
Gabriel Masset
Katrina R Kissock
Florent Vieux
Source :
European Journal of Nutrition, Kissock, K R, Vieux, F, Mathias, K C, Drewnowski, A, Seal, C J, Masset, G, Smith, J, Mejborn, H, McKeown, N M & Beck, E J 2022, ' Aligning nutrient profiling with dietary guidelines: modifying the Nutri-Score algorithm to include whole grains ', European Journal of Nutrition, vol. 61, pp. 541–553 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s00394-021-02718-6
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Purpose Whole grains, generally recognised as healthy choices, are not included in most nutrient profiling systems. We tested modifications to the Nutri-Score algorithm to determine whether including whole grains would provide an improved measure of food, and overall diet quality. Methods The whole-grain content of food, with a minimum cut-point of 25%, was added to the algorithm, following similar methods used to score other health-promoting components such as fibre. We applied and compared the original and the modified Nutri-Score to food composition and dietary intake data from Australia, France, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Results At the food level, correlations between whole-grain content and food nutritional score were strengthened using the modified algorithm in Australian data, but less so for the other countries. Improvements were greater in grain-specific food groups. The largest shift in Nutri-Score class was from B to A (best score). At the dietary intake level, whole-diet nutritional scores for individuals were calculated and compared against population-specific diet-quality scores. With modifications, correlations with diet-quality scores were improved slightly, suggesting that the modified score better aligns with national dietary guidelines. An inverse linear relationship between whole-diet nutritional score and whole-grain intake was evident, particularly with modifications (lower whole-diet nutritional score indicative of better diet quality). Conclusion Including a whole-grain component in the Nutri-Score algorithm is justified to align with dietary guidelines and better reflect whole grain as a contributor to improved dietary quality. Further research is required to test alternative algorithms and potentially other nutrient profiling systems.

Details

ISSN :
14366215
Volume :
61
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European journal of nutrition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....067d466e8fdc1771fe013271cede88b1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00394-021-02718-6