A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Longitudinal effect of 20-year infancy-onset dietary intervention on food consumption and nutrient intake: the randomized controlled STRIP study




AuthorsLaurie A. Matthews, Suvi P. Rovio, Johanna M Jaakkola, Harri Niinikoski, Hanna Lagström, Antti Jula, Jorma S. A. Viikari, Tapani Rönnemaa, Olli Simell, Olli T. Raitakari, Katja Pahkala

PublisherNature Publishing Group

Publication year2019

JournalEuropean Journal of Clinical Nutrition

Journal name in sourceEuropean Journal of Clinical Nutrition

Volume73

Issue6

First page 937

Last page949

Number of pages13

ISSN0954-3007

eISSN1476-5640

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1038/s41430-018-0350-4


Abstract

Background/Objectives
Coronary heart disease begins in childhood and warrants prevention strategies such as dietary modification. The objective was to determine the effect of the Special Turku Coronary Risk Factor Intervention Project (STRIP) dietary intervention on food consumption and nutrient intake over 20-year intervention period.

Subjects/Methods
The STRIP is a prospective, randomized trial conducted between 1990 and 2011. Enrolled 6-month-old infants (n = 1062) were randomized to an intervention group (n = 540) receiving dietary counseling biannually from age 7 months to 20 years or control group (n = 522) not receiving any intervention. Food and nutrient intake was assessed annually using 4-day food records. A food-based diet score was calculated.

Results
The intervention led to (1) higher consumption of low-fat unsweetened dairy (β = 177.76, 95% CI 157.36–198.16 g/day), vegetable-oil based fats (β = 6.00, 5.37–6.63 g/day), fish (β = 2.45, 1.44–3.45 g/day), fiber-rich grain products (β = 5.53, 3.17–7.89 g/day), fruits/berries (β = 9.93, 4.44–15.43 g/day), vegetables (β = 11.95, 7.74–16.16 g/day); (2) lower consumption of desserts (β = − 4.10, 95% CI − 6.50 to − 1.70 g/day); (3) lower intake of sucrose (β = − 1.61, 95% CI − 2.88 to − 0.35 g/day), and higher intake of fiber (β = 0.83, 0.55–1.11 g/day), folate (β = 11.14, 95% CI 8.23–14.05 μg/day), vitamin D (β = 0.52, 0.39–0.64 μg/day), C (β = 8.08, 4.79–11.38 mg/day), E (β = 0.93, 0.81–1.05 mg/day), iron (β = 0.31, 0.18–0.44 mg/day), zinc (β = 0.29, 0.17–0.40 mg/day), magnesium (β = 12.17, 9.02–15.33 mg/day), sodium (β = 55.00, 24.40–85.60 mg/day), potassium (β = 157.11, 107.24–206.98 mg/day). No effect was found on nut/seed, red/processed meat, sugar-sweetened beverage, salty snack consumption, or vitamin A and calcium intake. Intervention effect was more pronounced in boys.

Conclusions
The STRIP intervention improved children’s diet quality over 20 years, indicating that beneficial dietary changes can be introduced and sustained in youth.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 13:41