Increased eating frequency linked to decreased obesity and improved metabolic outcomes

House, B., Shearrer, G., Miller, S., Pasch, K. E., Goran, M., Davis, J. (2015). Increased Eating Frequency Linked to Decreased Obesity and Improved Metabolic Outcomes. International Journal of Obesity

Abstract

Background:

 We previously reported that more frequent eating in overweight minority youth was linked to lower visceral adiposity and circulating triglycerides. The aim of this study was to examine this issue in more detail by assessing the relationship between eating frequency and adiposity and metabolic disease risk in a cohort of exclusively overweight Hispanic youth.

Methods:

 This analysis included 191 overweight (greater than or equal to85th percentile body mass index (BMI)) Hispanic youth (8–18 years) with the following cross-sectional measures: height, weight, BMI, dietary intake via multiple 24h recalls, body composition via dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry, lipids and insulin action (insulin sensitivity, acute insulin response (AIR) and disposition index, a measure of β-cell function) via a frequently sampled intravenous glucose tolerance test. Each eating occasion (EO) was defined as greater than or equal to50 calories and greater than or equal to15min from any prior EO. Infrequent eaters (IEs) were classified as any subject who ate <3 EOs on any dietary recall (n=32), whereas frequent eaters (FEs) always consumed greater than or equal to3 EOs (n=159).

Results:

 Using analyses of covariance, FEs compared with IEs consumed 23% more calories per day (Pless than or equal to0.01), ate 40% more often and consumed 19% less calories per EO (Pless than or equal to0.01). FEs also exhibited 9% lower BMI Z-scores (Pless than or equal to0.01), 9% lower waist circumferences (Pless than or equal to0.01), 29% lower fasting insulin (P=0.02), 31% lower HOMA-IR (Homeostatic Model Assessment: Insulin Resistance) values (P=0.02) and 19% lower triglycerides (Pless than or equal to0.01), as well as an 11% higher AIR (P=0.02) and 31%higher disposition index (P=0.01). The following a priori covariates were included: Tanner, sex, body fat and reported energy intake.

Conclusion:

 These findings suggest that increased eating frequency is related to decreased obesity and metabolic disease risk in overweight Hispanic youth, despite increases in energy intake.