TY - JOUR
T1 - How is the adequacy of micronutrient intake assessed across Europe? A systematic literature review
AU - Tabacchi, Garden
AU - Wijnhoven, Trudy M.A.
AU - Branca, Francesco
AU - Román-Viñas, Blanca
AU - Ribas-Barba, Lourdes
AU - Ngo, Joy
AU - García-Álvarez, Alicia
AU - Serra-Majem, Lluís
PY - 2009/7
Y1 - 2009/7
N2 - EURopean micronutrient RECommendations Aligned is a network of excellence funded by the European commission, and established to address the problem of differences between countries in micronutrient recommendations as well as to understand how nutritional information including requirements and adequacy of intake is processed among different population groups. The aims of the present paper were to review the methods used for the adequacy assessment of the intake of six micronutrients of public health concern (vitamin A, folate, vitamin B12, Fe, Zn and iodine) in non-European and European nutrition surveys carried out on the apparently healthy population and to compare in particular the adequacy across surveys for folate intake. A systematic literature review was conducted to identify nutrition surveys that assessed micronutrient intake adequacy. The search yielded 9049 records, out of which 337 were eligible for the selected micronutrients. The majority (839%) of the European surveys compared the adequacy of the nutrient intake against the Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDA); only a few surveys (80%) used the estimated average requirement cut-point method, while none of them used the probability approach. The comparison of folate inadequacy across eight countries revealed that about 25% of the adult female population had inadequate intakes when judged against the different recommendations used by the respective investigators, but nearly 75% had inadequate intakes when compared against the estimated average requirement cut-point value of 320g/d. The present review showed that different methods were applied across Europe to estimate the adequacy of micronutrient intake, which led to different prevalence estimates of micronutrient inadequacy.
AB - EURopean micronutrient RECommendations Aligned is a network of excellence funded by the European commission, and established to address the problem of differences between countries in micronutrient recommendations as well as to understand how nutritional information including requirements and adequacy of intake is processed among different population groups. The aims of the present paper were to review the methods used for the adequacy assessment of the intake of six micronutrients of public health concern (vitamin A, folate, vitamin B12, Fe, Zn and iodine) in non-European and European nutrition surveys carried out on the apparently healthy population and to compare in particular the adequacy across surveys for folate intake. A systematic literature review was conducted to identify nutrition surveys that assessed micronutrient intake adequacy. The search yielded 9049 records, out of which 337 were eligible for the selected micronutrients. The majority (839%) of the European surveys compared the adequacy of the nutrient intake against the Recommended Dietary Allowances (RDA); only a few surveys (80%) used the estimated average requirement cut-point method, while none of them used the probability approach. The comparison of folate inadequacy across eight countries revealed that about 25% of the adult female population had inadequate intakes when judged against the different recommendations used by the respective investigators, but nearly 75% had inadequate intakes when compared against the estimated average requirement cut-point value of 320g/d. The present review showed that different methods were applied across Europe to estimate the adequacy of micronutrient intake, which led to different prevalence estimates of micronutrient inadequacy.
KW - Adequacy
KW - Adequacy assessment
KW - Dietary intake
KW - Folate
KW - Micronutrient intake
KW - Micronutrients
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=70149096445&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1017/S0007114509990560
DO - 10.1017/S0007114509990560
M3 - Article
C2 - 19594962
AN - SCOPUS:70149096445
SN - 0007-1145
VL - 101
SP - S29-S36
JO - British Journal of Nutrition
JF - British Journal of Nutrition
IS - SUPPL. 2
ER -