Using genetic variation to disentangle the complex relationship between food intake and health outcomes

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Abstract

Despite food choices being one of the most important factors influencing health, efforts to identify individual food groups and dietary patterns that cause disease have been challenging, with traditional nutritional epidemiological approaches plagued by biases and confounding. After identifying 302 individual genetic determinants of dietary intake in 445,779 individuals in the UK Biobank study, we develop a statistical genetics framework that enables us, to directly assess the impact of food choices on health outcomes. We show that the biases which affect observational studies extend also to GWAS, genetic correlations and causal inference through genetics, which can be corrected by applying our methods. Finally, by applying Mendelian Randomization approaches to the corrected results we identify some of the first robust causal associations between eating patterns and cancer, heart disease, obesity, and several other health related risk factors, distinguishing between the effects of specific foods or dietary patterns.

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europepmc
last seen: 2026-05-19T01:45:01.086888+00:00