Evaluation of Protein Adequacy From Plant-Based Dietary Scenarios in Simulation Studies: A Narrative Review.

J Nutr

Sustainable Nutrition Initiative, Riddet Institute, Massey University, Palmerston North, New Zealand. Electronic address:

Published: February 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • A plant-based diet can be healthy, but overly restrictive diets may lead to nutrient deficiencies, particularly in protein quality and amino acid digestibility.
  • This review examines 23 studies that modeled protein intake and quality when substituting animal proteins with plant-based options, focusing on different age groups' dietary needs.
  • Results showed that while plant-based options can meet some nutritional requirements, they often fall short for children and older adults, particularly when not using high-quality sources like legumes, nuts, and seeds.

Article Abstract

Although a diet high in plant foods can provide beneficial nutritional outcomes, unbalanced and restrictive plant-based diets may cause nutrient deficiencies. Protein intake from these diets is widely discussed, but the comparison of animal and plant proteins often disregards amino acid composition and digestibility as measurements of protein quality. Poor provision of high-quality protein may result in adverse outcomes, especially for individuals with increased nutrient requirements. Several dietary modeling studies have examined protein adequacy when animal-sourced proteins are replaced with traditional and novel plant proteins, but no review consolidating these findings are available. This narrative review aimed to summarize the approaches of modeling studies for protein intake and protein quality when animal-sourced proteins are replaced with plant foods in diet simulations and examine how these factors vary across age groups. A total of 23 studies using dietary models to predict protein contribution from plant proteins were consolidated and categorized into the following themes-protein intake, protein quality, novel plant-based alternatives, and plant-based diets in special populations. Protein intake from plant-based diet simulations was lower than from diets with animal-sourced foods but met country-specific nutrient requirements. However, protein adequacy from some plant-sourced foods were not met for simulated diets of children and older adults. Reduced amino acid adequacy was observed with increasing intake of plant foods in some scenarios. Protein adequacy was generally dependent on the choice of substitution with legumes, nuts, and seeds providing greater protein intake and quality than cereals. Complete replacement of animal to plant-sourced foods reduced protein adequacy when compared with baseline diets and partial replacements.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tjnut.2023.11.018DOI Listing

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