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Design and baseline characteristics of the Food4Me study: a web-based randomised controlled trial of personalised nutrition in seven European countries

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posted on 2015-01-01, 00:00 authored by C Celis-Morales, Katherine LivingstoneKatherine Livingstone, C F Marsaux, H Forster, C B O'Donovan, C Woolhead, A L Macready, R Fallaize, S Navas-Carretero, R San-Cristobal, S Kolossa, K Hartwig, L Tsirigoti, C P Lambrinou, G Moschonis, M Godlewska, A Surwiłło, K Grimaldi, J Bouwman, E J Daly, V Akujobi, R O'Riordan, J Hoonhout, A Claassen, U Hoeller, T E Gundersen, S E Kaland, J N Matthews, Y Manios, I Traczyk, C A Drevon, E R Gibney, L Brennan, M C Walsh, J A Lovegrove, J Alfredo Martinez, W H Saris, H Daniel, M Gibney, J C Mathers
Improving lifestyle behaviours has considerable potential for reducing the global burden of non-communicable diseases, promoting better health across the life-course and increasing well-being. However, realising this potential will require the development, testing and implementation of much more effective behaviour change interventions than are used conventionally. Therefore, the aim of this study was to conduct a multi-centre, web-based, proof-of-principle study of personalised nutrition (PN) to determine whether providing more personalised dietary advice leads to greater improvements in eating patterns and health outcomes compared to conventional population-based advice. A total of 5,562 volunteers were screened across seven European countries; the first 1,607 participants who fulfilled the inclusion criteria were recruited into the trial. Participants were randomly assigned to one of the following intervention groups for a 6-month period: Level 0-control group-receiving conventional, non-PN advice; Level 1-receiving PN advice based on dietary intake data alone; Level 2-receiving PN advice based on dietary intake and phenotypic data; and Level 3-receiving PN advice based on dietary intake, phenotypic and genotypic data. A total of 1,607 participants had a mean age of 39.8 years (ranging from 18 to 79 years). Of these participants, 60.9 % were women and 96.7 % were from white-European background. The mean BMI for all randomised participants was 25.5 kg m(-2), and 44.8 % of the participants had a BMI ≥ 25.0 kg m(-2). Food4Me is the first large multi-centre RCT of web-based PN. The main outcomes from the Food4Me study will be submitted for publication during 2015.

History

Journal

Genes & nutrition

Volume

10

Issue

1

Pagination

450 - 450

Publisher

Springer

Location

Berlin, Germany

ISSN

1555-8932

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2014, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg