Clear Search sequence regions


  • asia (1)
  • celiac disease (2)
  • cost analysis (2)
  • diet gluten- free (1)
  • fiber (2)
  • food (7)
  • food analysis (1)
  • food label (1)
  • free (21)
  • gluten (40)
  • humans (1)
  • india (3)
  • patients (1)
  • products (8)
  • sodium (2)
  • Sizes of these terms reflect their relevance to your search.

    Nutritional quality of gluten-free (GF) food products is very important, as patients with celiac disease consume these products for lifelong. There is paucity of data on the nutritional content and cost of GF food products compared with their gluten-containing (GC) counterparts from India (Asia). After a detailed market survey, packaged and labeled GF food products (n=485) and their packaged GC counterparts (n=790) from the supermarkets of Delhi (India) and e-commerce websites were included. Nutritional content and cost/100 g food (in US dollars) were calculated using the information on food label. Gluten-free food products were 232% (range: 118% to 376%) more expensive than their GC counterparts. Energy content of all GF food products was similar to their GC counterparts, except cereal-based snacks (GF: 445 kcal vs. GC: 510 kcal, p<0.001). The protein content was significantly lower in GF pasta and macaroni products (single-grain: GF: 6.5 g vs. GC:11. 5 g, p-0.002; multigrain: GF:7.6 g vs. GC:11.5 g, p-0.027), cereal flours (single-grain: GF: 7.6 g vs. GC: 12.3 g, p<0.001; multigrain: GF:10.9 g vs. GC: 14.1 g, p-0.009) and nutritional bars (GF: 21.81 g vs. GC:26 g, p-0.028) than their GC counterparts. Similarly, the dietary-fiber content of GF pasta and macaroni products, cereal flours, cereal premix and nutritional bars of GF foods was significantly lower than their GC counterparts. Gluten-free bread and confectionary items, biscuits and cookies and snacks had higher total fats and trans-fat content than their GC counterparts. Gluten-free cereal-based snacks had higher sodium content than their GC counterparts (GF: 820 mg vs. GC:670 mg; p<0.001). GF foods are significantly more expensive, contain less protein and dietary fiber and higher fat, trans-fat and sodium than their GC counterparts. Strategies must be developed to reduce the cost and improve the nutritional profile of GF foods. © 2024. Indian Society of Gastroenterology.

    Citation

    Wajiha Mehtab, Samagra Agarwal, Harsh Agarwal, Anam Ahmed, Ashish Agarwal, Shubham Prasad, Ashish Chauhan, Anjali Bhola, Namrata Singh, Vineet Ahuja, Anita Malhotra, Govind K Makharia. Gluten-free foods are expensive and nutritionally imbalanced than their gluten-containing counterparts. Indian journal of gastroenterology : official journal of the Indian Society of Gastroenterology. 2024 Jun;43(3):668-678

    Expand section icon Mesh Tags

    Expand section icon Substances


    PMID: 38753225

    View Full Text