Children (Nov 2021)

Breakfast Dietary Pattern Is Inversely Associated with Overweight/Obesity in European Adolescents: The HELENA Study

  • Leandro Teixeira Cacau,
  • Pilar De Miguel-Etayo,
  • Alba M. Santaliestra-Pasías,
  • Natalia Giménez-Legarre,
  • Dirce Maria Marchioni,
  • Cristina Molina-Hidalgo,
  • Laura Censi,
  • Marcela González-Gross,
  • Evangelia Grammatikaki,
  • Christina Breidenassel,
  • Thaïs De Ruyter,
  • Mathilde Kersting,
  • Frederic Gottrand,
  • Odysseas Androutsos,
  • Sonia Gómez-Martinez,
  • Anthony Kafatos,
  • Kurt Widhalm,
  • Peter Stehle,
  • Dénes Molnár,
  • Yannis Manios,
  • Stefaan De Henauw,
  • Luis A. Moreno

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/children8111044
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 11
p. 1044

Abstract

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Obesity in children and adolescents is a public health problem and diet can play a major role in this condition. We aimed to identify sex-specific dietary patterns (DP) and to evaluate the association with overweight/obesity in European adolescents. We conducted a cross-sectional analysis with 2327 adolescents aged between 12.5 to 17.5 years from a multicenter study across Europe. The body mass index was categorized in “normal weight” and “overweight/obesity”. Two non-consecutive 24-h dietary recalls were collected with a computerized self-reported software. Principal component factor analysis was used to identify DP. Mixed-effect logistic regression models were used to evaluate the association between the sex-specific DP and overweight/obesity outcome. As a result, we found three DP in boys (snacking and bread, Mediterranean diet, and breakfast) and four DP in girls (convenience, plant-based and eggs, Western, and breakfast). The association between DP and overweight/obesity highlights that those adolescents with higher adherence to the breakfast DP had lower odds for overweight/obesity, even after the inclusion of covariables in the adjustments. In European adolescents, the breakfast DP positively characterized by breakfast cereals, fruit, milk, and dairy and negatively characterized by sugar-sweetened beverages in boys and negatively characterized by cereals (pasta, rice, and others) in girls, was inversely associated with overweight/obesity.

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