Precision nutrition-based interventions for the management of obesity in children and adolescents up to the age of 19 years

Jan 30, 2025The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Personalized nutrition approaches for managing obesity in children and teens up to 19 years old

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Abstract

Two studies involving 105 participants provide very uncertain evidence regarding the effects of precision nutrition-based interventions on body weight or BMI in children and adolescents.

  • In children aged 0 to 9 years, a precision nutrition-based intervention showed a mean difference of -1.40 kg/m in body mass index (BMI) compared to a one-size-fits-all intervention, but the evidence is very low-certainty.
  • For weight in the same age group, the intervention resulted in a mean difference of -2.60 kg, also with very low-certainty evidence.
  • In children and adolescents aged 10 to 19 years, the precision nutrition-based intervention indicated a mean difference of 3.00 kg/m in BMI compared to standard care, though this is based on very low-certainty evidence.
  • The weight change in this older group showed a mean difference of 11.40 kg, again with very low-certainty evidence.
  • Overall, the limited number of studies and small participant sizes do not provide sufficient evidence to inform clinical practice regarding precision nutrition interventions.

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