Phyto-oestrogens are a group of non-steroidal, polyphenolic plant metabolites that induce biological responses and can mimic or modulate the action of endogenous oestrogens, often by binding to oestrogen receptors(1). The bioactivity of phyto-oestrogens is based on their structural similarity to 17β-oestradiol(Reference Setchell and Adlercreutz2) and their ability to bind to the oestrogen receptor(Reference Shutt and Cox3). Due to their bioactivity, these compounds are associated with potentially beneficial effects on a wide range of human conditions, such as cancer(Reference Peeters, Keinan-Boker and van der Schouw4–Reference Ward, Kuhnle and Mulligan6), CVD(Reference Anthony7, Reference Bhupathy, Haines and Leinwand8), osteoporosis(Reference Lagari and Levis9), menopausal symptoms(Reference Krebs, Ensrud and MacDonald10, Reference Tousen, Ezaki and Fujii11), obesity and type 2 diabetes(Reference Bhathena and Velasquez12, Reference Cederroth, Vinciguerra and Gjinovci13). The occurrence of many of these conditions is much lower in traditional Asian societies, where phyto-oestrogen-rich foods form an important component of the diet. Estimates suggest that the average isoflavone intake in Japan ranges from 25 to 100 mg/d(1).
The major phyto-oestrogen classes are isoflavones, found predominantly in legumes and soya foods; lignans, found in cereals, linseed, fruits and vegetables; and coumestans, found in young sprouting legumes, such as clover and alfalfa sprouts. Colonic microflora metabolise plant lignans into enterolignans, enterolactone and enterodiol(Reference Borriello, Setchell and Axelson14). Daidzein, an isoflavone, is metabolised to equol in some individuals(Reference Rowland, Wiseman and Sanders15). Traditional soya foods rich in isoflavones, such as tofu, tempeh and miso, are seldom consumed in the UK; instead soya dairy alternatives, such as soya milk, cheese, yoghurts, and textured vegetable protein (TVP)/tofu burgers are more commonly eaten. However a number of commercial products, such as bread, biscuits and breakfast cereals, contain soya ingredients as food additives and these also contribute to phyto-oestrogen intake(16, 17).
A number of detailed studies have previously been carried out to measure the phyto-oestrogen content of food items in the UK(Reference Liggins, Bluck and Runswick18–Reference Liggins, Mulligan and Runswick20), Finland(Reference Valsta, Kilkkinen and Mazur21), the USA(17, Reference Horn-Ross, Barnes and Lee22), the Netherlands(Reference Milder, Arts and Van De Putte23) and Canada(Reference Thompson, Boucher and Liu24). To date, there are few data available on soya and/or phyto-oestrogen intakes in the UK and most intake data have been mainly on isoflavones.
The present paper investigates the intakes, distributions and sources of phyto-oestrogen-containing foods in a population-based cohort study, the Norfolk arm of the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC-Norfolk), as recorded by a 7 d food diary (7dFD), using a newly in-filled phyto-oestrogen database.
Methods
The EPIC-Norfolk study
EPIC-Norfolk is a prospective cohort study of over 25 000 free-living men and women, aged between 40 and 75 years, studying the effects of nutrition and other lifestyle factors on health(Reference Day, Oakes and Luben25). The study was approved by the Norwich District Health Authority Ethics Committee, and all participants gave signed informed consent. Participants completed a 7dFD between 1993 and 1998, of which 92 % were returned. Of these, 20 437 were entered and available for statistical analysis.
Dietary data
The 7dFD is an A5, 45-page booklet in which the description, preparation and amounts of foods and drinks consumed at main meals, snacks and between meals are recorded over a week(Reference Bingham, Welch and McTaggart26). A trained nurse instructed each participant on how to fill in the diary. As part of this instruction, the nurse asked the participant to recall the previous day's intake and this description was written into the first day.
The diary data were entered using DINER (Data Into Nutrients for Epidemiological Research), a data-entry system specifically created for EPIC-Norfolk(Reference Welch, McTaggart and Mulligan27). The DINER program contains nutrient data derived from the 5th edition of McCance and Widdowson's The Composition of Foods and associated supplements(Reference Holland, Unwin and Buss28–Reference Chan, Brown and Church37). Although there are approximately 4500 food items available from these sources, the nutrient data of only 2704 of these food items are appropriate as DINER only contains foods in an edible state. More than 8000 items, so-called ‘new foods’, have been added to DINER in an attempt to cover the wide range of foods and drinks available in the UK. The nutrient data of these ‘new foods’ is obtained by matching known nutrient composition, e.g. using manufacturers’ data, with between one and four of the aforementioned 2704 items, in order to obtain the best possible match of nutrient analyses. These ‘new foods’ also contain approximately 2300 non-specific (n.s.) items, which are used when the data recorded in a food diary are minimal or missing, e.g. ‘bread n.s.’, ‘milk n.s.’, etc.
Selection of foods for analysis
Primarily single food items, called ‘basic foods’, were chosen for analysis (e.g. banana, rice, flour, peas). Foods to be analysed were selected on the basis of their frequency of consumption, calculated from the entry of more than 14 500 7dFD from EPIC-Norfolk. However, soya-containing foods (e.g. soya mince, soya and linseed bread) were also analysed, in addition to foods previously thought not to contain any phyto-oestrogens (e.g. meat, fish) and foods where there was uncertainty regarding the presence of phyto-oestrogens (e.g. milk, tea, coffee, alcohol). Of the 2704 foods, 349 were analysed for phyto-oestrogen content (13 %); values have been reported for cereals and cereal-based foods(Reference Kuhnle, Dell'aquila and Aspinall38), fruits and vegetables(Reference Kuhnle, Dell'Aquila and Aspinall39), beverages, nuts, seeds and oils(Reference Kuhnle, Dell'Aquila and Aspinall40) and foods from animal origin(Reference Kuhnle, Dell'Aquila and Aspinall41).
Analysis of foods
The phyto-oestrogens analysed included the isoflavones: biochanin A, daidzein, genistein, glycitein and formononetin; the lignans: matairesinol, secoisolariciresinol and shonanin; the enterolignans: enterodiol and enterolactone; and equol and coumestrol. Foods were analysed as described previously(Reference Kuhnle, Dell'Aquila and Low42). In brief, foods were prepared, freeze-dried and extracted with 10 % aqueous methanol by volume. After deconjugation with Helix pomatia juice, samples were prepared by solid-phase extraction and analysed by LC–MS/MS with triply 13C-labelled internal standards. The reproducibility of this method is better than 15 % (relative CV) and the detection limit is 1·5 μg/100 g.
Development of the phyto-oestrogen database
The remaining basic foods were in-filled using one of three methods: copying, calculating using a conversion factor or calculating using a recipe.
Values from similar food items were copied and assigned to 295 basic foods (11 %). Copying of values was carried out: (i) where there were two or more foods of a similar classification, but the analysis for only one of these was available (e.g. analysis of roast chicken breast used for grilled chicken breast without skin, fresh lemon juice used for fresh lime juice); (ii) where commercial products were analysed but similar types were not (e.g. analysis of commercial trifle used for frozen commercial trifle and frozen, boiled petit pois used for canned petit pois); and (iii) where recipe foods needed to be calculated without the availability of a recipe (e.g. values of homemade mayonnaise used for commercial mayonnaise, fresh chocolate éclair used for frozen chocolate éclair).
The foods that were analysed contained the edible part only. Therefore foods that included skin, bone/fat and peel had to be calculated accordingly, as did foods where the phyto-oestrogen content changed due to water uptake during cooking or water loss during drying. Values for 175 basic food items were calculated using a conversion factor in this way (6·5 %). Examples include toasted brown bread and avocado weighed with skin and stone.
Only a limited number of meats were analysed so values for other meats had to be in-filled from these data, many of which were calculated from separately analysed lean and fat samples. For example, ‘beef, topside, roasted, well done, lean and fat’ was calculated using the analysed values of ‘beef, topside, roasted, well done, lean’ (87 %) and ‘beef fat, roasted’ (13 %).
Of the aforementioned 2704 foods, 1056 had their phyto-oestrogen content assigned using the recipe calculation method (39 %), using basic food analyses and recipes mainly available in the 5th edition of McCance and Widdowson's The Composition of Foods and associated supplements(Reference Holland, Unwin and Buss28–Reference Chan, Brown and Church37). Examples of recipe foods include vegetable lasagne, egg custard tart and banana cake.
Remaining foods had different types of missing value assigned. The phyto-oestrogen content was assumed zero (e.g. salt, water); or amount unknown but may be significant (e.g. cocoa/hot chocolate powders, some cheeses, herbs and spices, less commonly consumed fruits and vegetables, some fish, some fats and oils, some meats, chocolate and savoury snacks).
Categorisation of soya foods and consumers
In the DINER system, similar foods are grouped together, such as tea and coffee, fruits, vegetables, breakfast cereals, etc. These food groups have been utilised to study food group sources of total lignans, total isoflavones and total phyto-oestrogens between ‘soya consumers’ (SC) and ‘non-soya consumers’ (NSC). SC were identified as those who had consumed any foods related to ‘soya’, ‘tofu’, ‘TVP’, ‘tempeh’ and/or ‘miso’, of which there were 134 in the DINER program. NSC did not consume any of these foods.
Statistical analyses
The data were analysed using the statistical software packages SAS version 9 and STATA version 10. Mean, standard deviation, median and interquartile range (IQR) were calculated to describe the distribution of intakes for two groups: SC and NSC, stratified by sex. Differences in means between these groups were tested using two-sided t tests and further adjusted for energy intake using linear regression analyses.
Results
Absolute phyto-oestrogen intake
Table 1 describes anthropometric data and average daily coumestrol, total enterolignan, isoflavone, lignan, phyto-oestrogen and energy intakes in 9326 NSC men and 354 SC men. The mean daily intakes of total isoflavones (P < 0·0001), lignans (P < 0·001) and phyto-oestrogens (P < 0·0001) were significantly higher in SC men than in NSC men; mean daily total phyto-oestrogen intake was 5051 (sd 5031) μg in SC men but only 1369 (sd 942) μg in NSC men. NSC men were significantly older and heavier and had a significantly greater BMI (all P < 0·05).
IQR, interquartile range; MD, difference between means.
*NSC men (n 9320).
†NSC men (n 9315).
‡NSC men (n 9311).
Data for 10 274 NSC and 483 SC women are shown in Table 2. The mean daily intakes of total isoflavones, lignans and phyto-oestrogens (all P < 0·0001) were significantly higher in SC women than in NSC women; mean daily total phyto-oestrogen intake was 5396 (sd 6092) μg in SC women but only 1008 (sd 652) μg in NSC women. NSC women consumed significantly less energy than SC women (P < 0·0001). However, the results from the energy-adjusted means did not differ from the unadjusted means. SC women were significantly younger, lighter and taller, and therefore also had a significantly lower BMI (P < 0·0001 for all except height, where P < 0·001).
IQR, interquartile range; MD, difference between means.
*NSC women (n 10 256); SC women (n 482).
†NSC women (n 10 255); SC women (n 482).
‡NSC women (n 10 247); SC women (n 482).
The mean daily total phyto-oestrogen intake was higher in SC women than in SC men, 5396 μg v. 5051 μg, but this difference was not significant. However, average daily intakes of total lignans (P < 0·05) and total enterolignans (P < 0·0 0 1) were significantly higher in SC men than in SC women.
The intakes of coumestrol, total enterolignans, isoflavones, lignans and phyto-oestrogens were slightly higher in all men than in all women and these differences were significant (P < 0·0001). The mean total daily phyto-oestrogen intake was 1504 μg in men (sd 1502 μg; median 1199 μg, IQR 934–1537 μg) and 1205 μg in women (sd 1701 μg; median 888 μg, IQR 710–1135 μg; data not shown). Total enterolignan intake was low in both men and women and was significantly related to milk and milk products intake (P < 0·0001).
Table 3 illustrates total mean daily phyto-oestrogen intake, by 10-year age bands, for NSC and SC, stratified by sex. There was a small significant linear decrease (P < 0·0001) in intake for both NSC men and women, as well as for SC men, with increasing age; this linear decrease was not as significant in SC women (P < 0·05). When the data were adjusted for energy, similar trends were observed (Table 3).
Sources of phyto-oestrogen intake
Data on percentage food group sources of total phyto-oestrogens, total isoflavones and total lignans in men and women are shown in Table 4, but only where food groups contribute 5 % or more to the intake of each phyto-oestrogen group. In all men and women, bread and bread rolls made the greatest contribution to phyto-oestrogen intake – 40·8 % and 35·6 %, respectively. When SC were excluded, the contribution made by bread and bread rolls rose to 45·1 % in men and 42·4 % in women. However, in SC men and women, foods contributing to total phyto-oestrogen intake were very different, with vegetable dishes and soya/goat's/sheep's milk being the main contributors, accounting for a combined total of approximately 67 % of intake in men and 72 % in women.
–, % contribution <5·0 %.
*Contain soya/textured vegetable protein/tofu/tempeh foods.
Bread and bread rolls also made the greatest contribution to total isoflavone intake in all men and women – 51·3 % and 45·2 %, respectively. In SC, vegetable dishes and soya/goat's/sheep's milk were the main contributors, accounting for approximately 66 % of intake in men and 72 % in women.
Tea and coffee were the main contributors to total lignan intakes, accounting for 32·8 % of intake in men and 37·3 % in women. These values are very similar to those found in NSC men and women (33·0 % and 37·8 %, respectively). This food group was also the greatest contributor to lignan intake in SC: 26·9 % in men and 29·4 % in women. The consumption of alcohol also contributed to lignan intake: approximately 7 % of intake in all women from wine and 21 % in all men from wine, beer and lager.
Figure 1a illustrates the percentage contribution of food groups to the daily intake of total phyto-oestrogens in NSC. Bread and bread rolls made the greatest contribution (43 %), followed by breakfast cereals (12 %) and tea and coffee (6 %). In SC, vegetable dishes were the highest contributor (41 %), followed by soya/goat's/sheep's milk (25 %) and bread and bread rolls (11 %) (Fig. 1b).
Food choices of soya consumers and non-soya consumers
Mean average daily intakes (in grams) of the food groups listed in Table 4 were compared between SC and NSC, stratified by sex, using a two-sample t test. In men, these were all significantly different (P < 0·0001 for all food groups except wine, where P < 0·05). NSC men had significantly higher intakes of vegetables, fruits, nuts and seeds, meat products, wine and beer and lager; intakes of bread and bread rolls, breakfast cereals, tea and coffee, vegetable dishes and soya/goat's/sheep's milk were higher in SC men.
In women, mean average daily intakes of most food groups listed were significantly different between SC and NSC (P < 0·0001 for all food groups, with the exception of wine and soya/goat's/sheep's milk where P < 0·05). NSC women had significantly higher intakes of vegetables, fruits, nuts and seeds, meat products, soya/goat's/sheep's milk and beer and lager; intakes of bread and bread rolls, breakfast cereals, tea and coffee, wine and vegetable dishes were higher in SC women.
Discussion
The aim of the present study was to investigate the average intake and distribution of soya-containing foods, coumestrol, total isoflavones, lignans, enterolignans and phyto-oestrogens, using a newly in-filled phyto-oestrogen database. This data set of phyto-oestrogen intake data is one of the largest to be investigated to date. The isoflavone intake data are similar to the intake of the vegetarian group (7·4 mg/d) in a recent UK study(Reference Ritchie, Cummings and Morton43). Data from the 1998 UK Total Diet Study estimated average daily intake of 3 mg of the combined isoflavone aglycones (daidzein, genistein and glycitein)(Reference Clarke and Lloyd44). Exposure estimates of total isoflavones for SC and soya-containing foods in UK adults based on the National Diet and Nutrition Survey (1986–1987) and the Dietary Survey of Vegetarians (1994–1995) were 0·6 and 2·6 mg/person per d respectively(45).
These data on daily isoflavone intake are higher than those from a previous study of EPIC-Norfolk participants(Reference Mulligan, Welch and McTaggart46); 0·84 mg in all men (IQR 0·39–0·82 mg) and 0·77 mg in all women (IQR 0·30–0·64 mg). The differences in intake can mainly be attributed to the inclusion of the phyto-oestrogen analysis of certain foods in the database, foods which had not previously been analysed in the UK, such as tea, coffee, meat, fish, milk and dairy products(Reference Kuhnle, Dell'Aquila and Aspinall40, Reference Kuhnle, Dell'Aquila and Aspinall41), as well as changes in the isoflavone content of isoflavone-rich foods, such as soya flour, soya yoghurt, tofu/soyabean curd, tofu burgers and soyabean burgers. These foods were previously taken from published values(Reference Kiely, Faughnan and Wahala47) but recently analysed in the UK(Reference Kuhnle, Dell'aquila and Aspinall38, Reference Kuhnle, Dell'Aquila and Aspinall41) and a 30–85 % reduction in their isoflavone content was found. Some commonly consumed foods, including brown and wholemeal breads, were also found to contain 20–30 % less isoflavones than previously estimated. The phyto-oestrogen content in plants is variable and depends on genetic, environmental, growth, harvesting and processing factors. A recent investigation into the variability of the phyto-oestrogen content in nine foods from different sources has shown that the phyto-oestrogen content varied on average by a factor of 2·8, with a CV of 39 % for isoflavones and 33 % for lignans(Reference Kuhnle, Dell'Aquilla and Runswick48).
Food group sources of total lignans, total isoflavones and total phyto-oestrogens were analysed separately. The richest food group source of both total isoflavones and phyto-oestrogens was bread and bread rolls. This is due to the soya flour added to bread in large-scale bread manufacture which produces 80 % of the UK's bread. In EPIC-Norfolk, 96–97 % of bread is commercially produced. Data from Italy and Ireland have estimated that over 90 % of total isoflavone intake comes from bread(Reference Van Erp-Baart, Brants and Kiely49).
Recipes from McCance and Widdowson's The Composition of Foods, 5th edition and its associated food supplements(Reference Holland, Unwin and Buss28–Reference Chan, Brown and Church37) were used in calculating the phyto-oestrogen content of most food products and dishes. However, some of these foods were analysed in the 1980s (e.g. croissants, jam tarts, scones, apple pies), and soya is not listed as an ingredient. In the DINER system(Reference Welch, McTaggart and Mulligan27), commercial items sometimes receive the same nutrient composition as homemade items in the absence of reliable analyses. Therefore underestimation of phyto-oestrogen content is likely as it has been estimated that 60 % of commercially processed foods contain soya(17).
Regarding food group sources of phyto-oestrogens in SC, vegetable dishes and soya/goat's/sheep's milk were the main contributors. Soya product consumption in ten countries participating in the EPIC study consisting of 35 955 subjects, as measured by a 24 h dietary recall interview, found that soya product consumption is low in Western European countries. Of the seven subgroups of soya products, soya dairy products were consumed in the highest quantities: 1200 mg/d for men and 1900 mg/d for women(Reference Keinan-Boker, Peeters and Mulligan50).
A number of the findings relating to the food group choices made by SC and NSC were somewhat unexpected. In both NSC men and women, intakes of vegetables, fruit, nuts and seeds were significantly higher, whereas intakes of bread and bread rolls, breakfast cereals, tea and coffee and vegetable dishes were significantly higher in SC. However the differences found were small and could have been due to the large sample size. A more detailed food group classification is required to more accurately assess choices made by SC and NSC.
The ability to more accurately estimate phyto-oestrogen and soya intake in Western populations will enable investigations into the suggested beneficial effects of soya on health to be carried out, in the absence of biomarker data.
Acknowledgements
Source of funding: This study was supported by research grants from the Food Standards Agency (T05028), the Medical Research Council (G0500300, G1000143) and Cancer Research UK (C864/A8257). Conflicts of interest: The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest. Authors’ contribution: A.A.M. oversaw the development of the database, conducted the statistical analyses and drafted the manuscript. M.A.H.L., K.-T.K. and G.G.C.K. assisted in writing and revising the manuscript. M.A.H.L., V.v.S., N.A.P. and A.M. assisted in the development of the database. A.B. created the programs for the database. All authors read and approved the final manuscript. Acknowledgements: The authors would like to thank all participants of the EPIC-Norfolk study and the EPIC staff for their help with this work.