Health & Wellbeing

New urine test can tell if you are on the best diet for your body

New urine test can tell if you are on the best diet for your body
The new test measures 46 metabolites, helping physicians better understand how effective a particular dietary strategy may be for each individual patient
The new test measures 46 metabolites, helping physicians better understand how effective a particular dietary strategy may be for each individual patient
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The new test measures 46 metabolites, helping physicians better understand how effective a particular dietary strategy may be for each individual patient
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The new test measures 46 metabolites, helping physicians better understand how effective a particular dietary strategy may be for each individual patient

A newly developed test that measures a number of metabolites in urine can effectively determine not only the quality of a person’s nutritional intake, but whether they are on the right diet for their specific metabolism. The five-minute test creates a novel "urine fingerprint" that could help clinicians generate personalized dietary advice tailored to individual patients.

"Diet is a key contributor to human health and disease, though it is notoriously difficult to measure accurately because it relies on an individual's ability to recall what and how much they ate,” says Joram Posma, an author on the new research from Imperial College London. “For instance, asking people to track their diets through apps or diaries can often lead to inaccurate reports about what they really eat.”

The research, spanning two new studies published in the journal Nature Food, began with the collection of urine samples from nearly 2,000 subjects. The findings homed in on 46 detectable metabolites that were associated with a number of different dietary conditions.

"Through careful measurement of people's diets and collection of their urine excreted over two 24-hour periods we were able to establish links between dietary inputs and urinary output of metabolites that may help improve understanding of how our diets affect health,” explains Paul Elliot, another Imperial researcher working on the project. “Healthful diets have a different pattern of metabolites in the urine than those associated with worse health outcomes."

The next stage was to turn these findings into a clinically useful test. A "fingerprint" metric called the Dietary Metabotype Score (DMS) was created to offer a single number to measure how healthy a person’s diet is based on the metabolic markers measured from a urine sample.

Based on the World Health Organization's balanced diet recommendations, four diets ranging from very healthy to very unhealthy were trialled in 19 volunteers. Every volunteer spent at least three days on each diet, supplying urine samples from which a Dietary Metabotype Score was calculated.

A high DMS effectively correlated with the healthiest diet, however, not all scores were equal. Notable variations in scores between subjects following the same diet suggested different people may require more specifically tailored dietary interventions to reach optimum health.

"We show here how different people metabolize the same foods in highly individual ways,” explains researcher John Mathers, from Newcastle University. “This has implications for understanding the development of nutrition-related diseases and for more personalized dietary advice to improve public health."

This new form of urinary metabolic profiling offers physicians a way to objectively measure the effect of particular dietary interventions on individual patients. More than simply offering a way to police a person’s adherence to a given diet, the novel test can identify how the same foods can be processed differently from person to person.

“This research reveals this technology can help provide in-depth information on the quality of a person's diet, and whether it is the right type of diet for their individual biological make-up,” notes Posma.

The two new studies were published in the journal Nature Food.

Source: Imperial College London

5 comments
5 comments
piperTom
I'm hoping for a bigger sample than 19 in the next trial. Even more, I'd like a bluetooth attached gizmo (<$100) to take the samples so my phone can interpret the results. If a physician is required, the info will be so expensive that only seriously obese people and the very rich can take advantage.
Signguy
piperTOM, I agree; a AP that can be downloaded for individual use, then access to a database would be ideal.
Jinpa
Metabolites is not defined in the story. It is just a breakdown product of what you eat. The abstract asserts that eating an unhealthy diet is bad for you, that the proof is in glucose in the blood, that different people show different results from the same diet, and that the experimenters have developed a test which can show that. What a waste of money. The problem with such a notion as underlies the described studies is that it does not account for the bioeme effects of the paltry 19 individuals studied. Dr. Tim Spector's book "The Diet Myth" explains why those effects would be crucial in accounting for any metabolites in the urine. "The Healthy Gut Handbook by Justine Pattison and Tim Spector is the follow-on book.
SendSauce
The problem with this and with most other "health tracker" apps and devices is that just because they are possible, doesn't mean they are _that_ useful. Sure, it's pretty good for facing you in a generally good direction, but there are so many factors that they can't account for that it's not a good idea to recommend anything but vague generalizations about how to proceed with your diet.

The tech with today's sensors and compact computing power is pretty easy. The hard part is the data you need to be accurate enough to be useful. Especially for athletes , or people with bowel/stomach conditions on the other end of the scale. Step counters...lol, try wearing two different types.

Point is all that cool app stuff is mostly just fancy looking icons with numbers that look very granular until you realize they're spitting out numbers based on the average human, not your particular characteristics.
The real tech is in having the most data taking into account enough factors to be personally relevant to a much better degree of accuracy based on small sample sizes, and that's time consuming and expensive.

On the positive side, this is a great vector towards eventually providing a simple, easy and relatively accurate device that one can get results for without a doctor's appointment every day. Some larger studies enhanced with a dash of machine learning could be quite a boon for people who would like to stay as informed about their own health as possible!
ljaques
I look forward to seeing a program like this turn out solid data and start more people back on the track of superior health. I honestly feel that over half the disease in the world is the result of a poor diet and food allergies. Come on, ICL, prove me right!