Nutrients (Sep 2019)

Glycemic Index and Insulinemic Index of Foods: An Interlaboratory Study Using the ISO 2010 Method

  • Thomas M.S. Wolever,
  • Alexandra Meynier,
  • Alexandra L. Jenkins,
  • Jennie C. Brand-Miller,
  • Fiona S. Atkinson,
  • David Gendre,
  • Sébastien Leuillet,
  • Murielle Cazaubiel,
  • Béatrice Housez,
  • Sophie Vinoy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/nu11092218
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 9
p. 2218

Abstract

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An official method for determining food glycemic index (GI) was published by the Organization for International Standardization (ISO) in 2010, but its performance has not been assessed. Therefore, we aimed to determine the intra- and inter-laboratory variation of food GI values measured using the 2010 ISO method. Three laboratories (Australia, Canada and France) determined the GI and insulinemic-index (II) of six foods in groups of 13−15 participants using the 2010 ISO method and intra- and inter-laboratory Standard Deviations (SDs) were calculated. Overall mean food GIs varied from 47 to 86 (p < 0.0001) with no significant difference among labs (p = 0.57) and no food × laboratory interaction (p = 0.20). Within-laboratory SD was similar among foods (range, 17.8−22.5; p = 0.49) but varied among laboratories (range 17.5−23.1; p = 0.047). Between-laboratory SD of mean food GI values ranged from 1.6 to 6.7 (mean, 5.1). Mean glucose and insulin responses varied among foods (p < 0.001) with insulin (p = 0.0037), but not glucose (p = 0.054), varying significantly among labs. Mean II varied among foods (p < 0.001) but not among labs (p = 0.94). In conclusion, we found that using the 2010 ISO method, the mean between-laboratory SD of GI was 5.1. This suggests that the ISO method is sufficiently precise to distinguish a mean GI = 55 from a mean GI ≥ 70 with 97−99% probability.

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