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Lipid profiling and dietary assessment of infant formulas reveal high intakes of major cholesterol oxidative product (7-ketocholesterol)

Food Chem. 2021 Mar 9;354:129529. doi: 10.1016/j.foodchem.2021.129529. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Approximately two-thirds of US infants receive infant formula (IF) as a primary or sole nutritional source during the first six months of life. IF is available in a variety of commercial presentations; from a manufacturing standpoint, they can be categorized as powder- (PIF) or liquid- (LIF) based formulations. Thirty commercial IFs were analyzed in their oxidative and non-oxidative lipid profiles. We identified 7-ketocholesterol – a major end-product of cholesterol oxidation – as a potential biomarker of IF manufacturing. The statistical analysis allowed a re-classification of IF based on their metabolomic fingerprint, resulting in three groups assigned with low-to-high oxidative status. Finally, we modeled the dietary intake of cholesterol, sterols, and 7-ketocholesterol in the first year of life. The database provided in this study will be instrumental for scientists interested in infant nutrition, to establish bases for epidemiological studies aimed to find connections between nutrition and diet-associated diseases, such as sitosterolemia.

PMID:33761334 | DOI:10.1016/j.foodchem.2021.129529

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