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Journal article

The nordic nutrition recommendations 2022 – Structure and rationale of qualified systematic reviews

From

University of Oslo1

Research group for Nutrition and Health Promotion, National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark2

National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark3

Research Group for Risk Benefit, National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark4

National Food Agency5

University of Helsinki6

The Norwegian Directorate of Health7

Norwegian Institute of Public Health8

University of Iceland9

University of Eastern Finland10

...and 0 more

Background: Qualified systematic reviews (SRs) will form the main basis for evaluating causal effects of nutrients or food groups on health outcomes in the sixth edition of Nordic Nutrition Recommendations to be published in 2022 (NNR2022). Objective: To describe rationale and structure of SRs used in NNR2022.

Design: The SR methodologies of the previous edition of NNR were used as a starting point. Methodologies of recent SRs commissioned by leading national food and health authorities or international food and health organizations were examined and scrutinized. Methodologies for developing SRs were agreed by the NNR2022 Committee in a consensus-driven process.

Results: Qualified SRs will be developed by a cross-disciplinary group of experts and reported according to the requirements of the EQUATOR network. A number of additional requirements must also be fulfilled, including 1) a clearly stated set of objectives and research questions with pre-defined eligibility criteria for the studies, 2) an explicit, reproducible methodology, 3) a systematic search that attempts to identify all studies that would meet the eligibility criteria, 4) an assessment of the validity of the findings of the included studies through an assessment of ‘risk of bias’ of the studies, 5) a systematic presentation and synthesis of the characteristics and findings of the included studies, and 6) a grading of the overall evidence.

The complete definition and requirements of a qualified SR are described. Discussion: Most SRs published in scientific journals do not fulfill all criteria of the qualified SRs in the NNR2022 project. This article discusses the structure and rationale for requirements of qualified SRs in NNR2022. National food and health authorities have only recently begun to use qualified SRs as a basis for nutrition recommendations.

Conclusion: Qualified SRs will be used to inform dietary reference values (DRVs) and food-based dietary guidelines (FBDGs) in the NNR2022 project.

Language: English
Publisher: Open Academia
Year: 2020
ISSN: 11026510 , 16546628 and 1654661x
Types: Journal article
DOI: 10.29219/fnr.v64.4403
ORCIDs: Andersen, Rikke and Trolle, Ellen

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