Traditionally, nutritional epidemiology is the study of the relationship between diet and health and disease in humans at the population level. Commonly, the exposure of interest is food intake. In recent years, nutritional epidemiology has moved from a “black box” approach to a systems approach where genomics, metabolomics and proteomics are providing novel insights into the interplay between diet and health. In this context, metabolomics is emerging as a key tool in nutritional epidemiology. The present review explores the use of metabolomics in nutritional epidemiology. In particular, it examines the role that food-intake biomarkers play in addressing the limitations of self-reported dietary intake data and the potential of using metabolite measurements in assessing the impact of diet on metabolic pathways and physiological processes. However, for full realisation of the potential of metabolomics in nutritional epidemiology, key challenges such as robust biomarker validation and novel methods for new metabolite identification need to be addressed. The synergy between traditional epidemiologic approaches and metabolomics will facilitate the translation of nutritional epidemiologic evidence to effective precision nutrition.
Evan Y. Yu, Anke Wesselius, Christoph Sinhart, Alicja Wolk, Mariana C. Stern, Xuejuan Jiang, Li Tang, James R. Marshall, Eliane Kellen, Piet A. van den Brandt, Chih‐Ming Lu, Hermann Pohlabeln, Gunnar Steineck, Mohamed Farouk Allam, Margaret R. Karagas, Carlo La Vecchia, Stefano Porru, Angela Carta, Klaus Golka, Kenneth C. Johnson, Simone Benhamou, Zuo‐Feng Zhang, Cristina Bosetti, Jack A. Taylor, Elisabete Weiderpass, Eric J. Grant, Emily White, Jerry Polesel, Maurice P. Zeegers
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