Abstract

Background: Calorie-dense diet is a main driver of the global epidemics of obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2DM). While various dietary strategies and patterns are efficacious in reducing risk and improving glycemic control, dietary intake and diet quality have been inadequately studied among individuals who remain living in their native environments. There is also little published on dietary patterns of diverse ethnic, cultural, or regional populations. Objective: To explore dietary intakes, patterns and overall diet quality in adults with obesity and T2DM from diverse countries. We hypothesized that individuals sharing a common clinical phenotype (age, BMI, years since T2DM diagnosis and inadequate glycemic control) would demonstrate comparable high calorie “western” dietary patterns and low diet quality despite differences in geographic regions and cultures. Design: Diet data were acquired from 611 adults in Argentina, Germany, Poland, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Turkey and the USA via three 24-h diet recalls. Contribution of 168 foods to 14 primary food groups was confirmed by Spearman’s rank-order correlations and Principle Component Factor Analysis identified dietary patterns. Diet quality was assessed using the Healthy Eating Index 2015. Results: Eleven dietary patterns were extracted; the most common were a “Mediterranean-like” pattern shared by six countries and a “Calorie Dense” pattern shared by five countries. Also common were “Lacto-Vegetarian, “Pesco-Vegetarian,” and “Vegan” patterns. Only 2.1% of subjects had good diet quality (HEI-2015 score >80). Conclusions: The diet pattern data suggest that influences of more traditional region-specific diets remain. However, overall diet quality was poor and may contribute to inadequate glycemic control, possibly due to excess intake of high calorie/nutrient poor foods, which may be associated with global transitions occurring in the available food supply.

Highlights

  • Despite the World Health Organization’s goal to reduce the prevalence of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), the incidence of T2DM has escalated rapidly from a local public health concern to a global pandemic affecting over 415 million individuals worldwide

  • Overall diet quality was poor and may contribute to inadequate glycemic control, possibly due to excess intake of high calorie/nutrient poor foods, which may be associated with global transitions occurring in the available food supply

  • The purpose of this study was to explore the dietary intakes of individuals living in several distinct countries who share a common clinical phenotype characterized by similar age, high BMI, years since diagnosis of T2DM, and inadequate glycemic control

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Summary

Introduction

Despite the World Health Organization’s goal to reduce the prevalence of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), the incidence of T2DM has escalated rapidly from a local public health concern to a global pandemic affecting over 415 million individuals worldwide. A study using data from 70 high- and middle-income countries to estimate the social and economic effects of the globalization of the food supply showed no significant relationship with the overall nutritional composition of the diet or the prevalence of T2DM [10], an ecological analysis using food product availability databases from 96 countries showed the degree of exposure to a “westernized” diet had a dose–response relationship with the prevalence of T2DM [11]. While various dietary strategies and patterns are efficacious in reducing risk and improving glycemic control, dietary intake and diet quality have been inadequately studied among individuals who remain living in their native environments. Objective: To explore dietary intakes, patterns and overall diet quality in adults with obesity and T2DM from diverse countries. Contribution of 168 foods to 14 primary food groups was confirmed by Spearman’s rank-order correlations and Principle Component Factor

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