Abstract

Fruit and vegetables make an important contribution to health, partly due to the composition of phytonutrients, such as carotenoids and polyphenols. The aim of the present study was to quantify the intake of fruit and vegetables across different European countries using food consumption data of increasing complexity: food balance sheets (FBS); the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) Comprehensive Database; individual food consumption data from the UK National Diet and Nutrition Survey (NDNS). Across Europe, the average consumption of fruit and vegetables ranged from 192 to 824g/d (FBS data). Based on EFSA data, nine out of fourteen countries consumed <400g/d (recommended by the WHO), although even in the highest-consuming countries such as Spain, 36% did not reach the target intake. In the UK, the average consumption of fruit and vegetables was 310g/d (NDNS data). Generally, phytonutrient intake increased in accordance with fruit and vegetable intake across all European countries with the exception of lycopene (from tomatoes), which appeared to be higher in some countries that consumed less fruit and vegetables. There were little differences in the average intake of flavanols, flavonols and lycopene in those who did or did not meet the 400g/d recommendation in the UK. However, average intakes of carotenoid, flavanone, anthocyanidin and ellagic acid were higher in those who consumed >400g/d of fruit and vegetables compared with those who did not. Overall, intakes of phytonutrients are highly variable, suggesting that while some individuals obtain healthful amounts, there may be others who do not gain all the potential benefits associated with phytonutrients in the diet.

Highlights

  • Fruit and vegetables make an important contribution to health, partly due to the composition of phytonutrients, such as carotenoids and polyphenols

  • While Sweden is among the higher fruit and vegetable-consuming countries in the food balance sheets (FBS) dataset, it appears as the lowest-consuming country in the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) database

  • While the average consumer across Europe appears to consume nearly the recommended amount of 400 g/d of fruit and vegetables, there is a significant degree of variation. Some of this variation is between national diets, and the average consumption can vary by up to 4-fold between some countries in southern Europe and their northern and central European counterparts

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Summary

Introduction

Fruit and vegetables make an important contribution to health, partly due to the composition of phytonutrients, such as carotenoids and polyphenols. A plethora of phytochemicals are produced by plants; these secondary metabolites are used to protect the plant from UV light, as insect or pest defence, and to produce colour and other organoleptic characteristics(3) They are not classically regarded as nutrients (as they are not required for essential growth or maintenance of life); their sheer abundance in plant-based foods and significant potential to improve health mean they are regarded as phytonutrients. Chemically unrelated, phytonutrients exist in plant-based foods, including carotenoids, polyphenols, indoles, glucosinolates, organosulfides, betalains, phytosterols and others. All of these have been studied for their potential bioactivity in relation to health, initially due to interest in antioxidant properties of many of these compounds.

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