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The impact of later eating rhythm on childhood adiposity: Protocol for a systematic review

The impact of later eating rhythm on childhood adiposity: Protocol for a systematic review
The impact of later eating rhythm on childhood adiposity: Protocol for a systematic review

Background: Childhood adiposity has increased dramatically in the last few decades and is an important predictor of adulthood chronic disease. Later eating rhythm, termed night eating (NE), is increasingly prevalent in adults; however, the prevalence of NE in children and relationship between NE and adiposity in children still remains uncertain. The aim of this work is to review the association between adiposity in children and adolescents and NE, in terms of calorie intake, timing and meal frequency in the evening/night. Methods: The Cochrane library, CINAHL, Embase, MEDLINE (via OVID) and Web of Science databases will be searched from inception to November 2019 for randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and observational studies (cohort, cross-sectional and case-control studies) which investigate the association between later vs. earlier timing of food intake at night or relatively more vs. less energy intake in any eating occasions or time period after 4 pm on adiposity in children and adolescents (4-18 years). The outcomes will be body mass index (BMI)/BMI standard deviation score (BMI-SDS or BMI Z-score), waist circumference (WC), fat mass index (FMI)/percentage of body fat (%BF) or waist to hip ratio (WHR). No language restriction will be applied. Screening for eligibility from the title and abstracts and data extraction from the full texts will be carried out by two reviewers independently. References listed in the included studies will be hand-searched for any additional articles. The quality of included RCT studies will be assessed using Revised Cochrane Risk of Bias tool (RoB 2), and of observational studies using Newcastle Ottawa scale. A qualitative synthesis of the results will be presented, and meta-analysis will be conducted, where appropriate. Discussion: The planned systematic review will investigate the association between later eating rhythm and adiposity in children and adolescents. Understanding the best meal size, timing of energy intake and meal frequency across the evening time for maintaining healthy weight in children is important in order to give parents the best advice to help prevent adulthood obesity and associated chronic diseases in their children. Systematic review registration: PROSPERO CRD42019134187.

Adiposity, Adolescence, Childhood, Later eating rhythm, Night eating, Obesity, School age children
2046-4053
Zou, Mengxuan
c3511a8c-20d7-4627-8b62-3cdea799f558
Northstone, Kate
3992293f-1ea8-409a-b0ea-7fc15220116c
Perry, Rachel
15130375-8325-497d-9198-a273d4a2834e
Johnson, Laura
4395b3c3-31bb-4818-ab47-09c6869c03e4
Leary, Sam
7e88b432-83de-4de9-b362-da5fd17f4de5
Zou, Mengxuan
c3511a8c-20d7-4627-8b62-3cdea799f558
Northstone, Kate
3992293f-1ea8-409a-b0ea-7fc15220116c
Perry, Rachel
15130375-8325-497d-9198-a273d4a2834e
Johnson, Laura
4395b3c3-31bb-4818-ab47-09c6869c03e4
Leary, Sam
7e88b432-83de-4de9-b362-da5fd17f4de5

Zou, Mengxuan, Northstone, Kate, Perry, Rachel, Johnson, Laura and Leary, Sam (2019) The impact of later eating rhythm on childhood adiposity: Protocol for a systematic review. Systematic Reviews, 8 (1), [290]. (doi:10.1186/s13643-019-1226-y).

Record type: Review

Abstract

Background: Childhood adiposity has increased dramatically in the last few decades and is an important predictor of adulthood chronic disease. Later eating rhythm, termed night eating (NE), is increasingly prevalent in adults; however, the prevalence of NE in children and relationship between NE and adiposity in children still remains uncertain. The aim of this work is to review the association between adiposity in children and adolescents and NE, in terms of calorie intake, timing and meal frequency in the evening/night. Methods: The Cochrane library, CINAHL, Embase, MEDLINE (via OVID) and Web of Science databases will be searched from inception to November 2019 for randomised controlled trials (RCTs) and observational studies (cohort, cross-sectional and case-control studies) which investigate the association between later vs. earlier timing of food intake at night or relatively more vs. less energy intake in any eating occasions or time period after 4 pm on adiposity in children and adolescents (4-18 years). The outcomes will be body mass index (BMI)/BMI standard deviation score (BMI-SDS or BMI Z-score), waist circumference (WC), fat mass index (FMI)/percentage of body fat (%BF) or waist to hip ratio (WHR). No language restriction will be applied. Screening for eligibility from the title and abstracts and data extraction from the full texts will be carried out by two reviewers independently. References listed in the included studies will be hand-searched for any additional articles. The quality of included RCT studies will be assessed using Revised Cochrane Risk of Bias tool (RoB 2), and of observational studies using Newcastle Ottawa scale. A qualitative synthesis of the results will be presented, and meta-analysis will be conducted, where appropriate. Discussion: The planned systematic review will investigate the association between later eating rhythm and adiposity in children and adolescents. Understanding the best meal size, timing of energy intake and meal frequency across the evening time for maintaining healthy weight in children is important in order to give parents the best advice to help prevent adulthood obesity and associated chronic diseases in their children. Systematic review registration: PROSPERO CRD42019134187.

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More information

Published date: 26 November 2019
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2019 The Author(s).
Keywords: Adiposity, Adolescence, Childhood, Later eating rhythm, Night eating, Obesity, School age children

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 475821
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475821
ISSN: 2046-4053
PURE UUID: 32268410-69d3-437a-a3ca-6d43fea6561f
ORCID for Mengxuan Zou: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1713-6639

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Date deposited: 28 Mar 2023 18:36
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:19

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Contributors

Author: Mengxuan Zou ORCID iD
Author: Kate Northstone
Author: Rachel Perry
Author: Laura Johnson
Author: Sam Leary

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