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Temporal Eating Patterns and Eating Windows among Adults with Overweight or Obesity
Authors:Collin J. Popp,Margaret Curran,Chan Wang,Malini Prasad,Keenan Fine,Allen Gee,Nandini Nair,Katherine Perdomo,Shirley Chen,Lu Hu,David E. St-Jules,Emily N. C. Manoogian,Satchidananda Panda,Mary Ann Sevick,Blandine Laferrè  re
Abstract:We aim to describe temporal eating patterns in a population of adults with overweight or obesity. In this cross-sectional analysis, data were combined from two separate pilot studies during which participants entered the timing of all eating occasions (>0 kcals) for 10–14 days. Data were aggregated to determine total eating occasions, local time of the first and last eating occasions, eating window, eating midpoint, and within-person variability of eating patterns. Eating patterns were compared between sexes, as well as between weekday and weekends. Participants (n = 85) had a median age of 56 ± 19 years, were mostly female (>70%), white (56.5%), and had a BMI of 31.8 ± 8.0 kg/m2. The median eating window was 14 h 04 min [12 h 57 min–15 h 21 min], which was significantly shorter on the weekend compared to weekdays (p < 0.0001). Only 13.1% of participants had an eating window <12 h/d. Additionally, there was greater irregularity with the first eating occasion during the week when compared to the weekend (p = 0.0002). In conclusion, adults with overweight or obesity have prolonged eating windows (>14 h/d). Future trials should examine the contribution of a prolonged eating window on adiposity independent of energy intake.
Keywords:meal timing   breakfast skipping   time-restricted eating   intermittent fasting   meal patterns   alternate day fasting
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