Serum fatty acids are increasingly used in cross-sectional surveys and cohort studies as biomarkers of dietary fat intake; however, it is currently difficult to judge whether an individual has low or high fatty acid status, or whether the distribution of fatty acids of a group of people is low or high due to a lack of appropriate reference values. In the absence of interpretive criteria, the distribution of serum fatty acids from a suitable reference population can be used as an alternative. We describe the distribution of the fatty acid composition of the three most commonly reported lipid classes in serum; cholesterol ester, phospholipid and triacylgycerol. Results for each serum lipid class are presented as means (SD) and percentiles (5, 10, 25, 50, 75, 90, and 95) of serum fatty acids in non-fasting blood samples collected from a population based cross-sectional survey of New Zealand adults ( n = 2793). These serum fatty acid reference ranges are applicable and relevant to Australia, United Kingdom, and United States as well as other countries where fat intakes are similar to New Zealand.
References
[1]
Hodson, L.; Skeaff, C.M.; Fielding, B.A. Fatty acid composition of adipose tissue and blood in humans and its use as a biomarker of dietary intake. Prog. Lipid. Res.?2008, 47, 348–380.
[2]
Quigley, R.J.; Watts, C. Food Comes First: Methodologies for the National Nutrition Survey of New Zealand; New Zealand Ministry of Health: Wellington, New Zealand, 1997.
[3]
Russell, D.G.; Parnell, W.R.; Wilson, N.C.; Faed, J.; Ferguson, E.; Herbison, P. NZ Food: NZ People. Key results of the 1997 National Nutrition Survey; New Zealand Ministry of Health: Wellington, New Zealand, 1999.
[4]
Parnell, W.R.; Wilson, N.C.; Russell, D.G. Methodology of the 1997 New Zealand National Nutrition Survey. N. Z. Med. J.?2001, 114, 123–126.
[5]
Bligh, E.G.; Dyer, W.J. A rapid method of total lipid extraction and purification. Can. J. Biochem. Physiol.?1959, 37, 911–917.
[6]
Moilanen, T.; Nikkari, T. The effect of storage on the fatty acid composition of human serum. Clin. Chim. Acta?1981, 114, 111–116.
[7]
McLennan, W.; Podger, A.S. National Nutrition Survey: Nutrient Intakes and Physical Measurements; Australian Bureau of Statistics, Commonwealth of Australia: Canberra, Australia, 1998.
[8]
Bates, B.; Lennox, A.; Swan, G. National Diet and Nutrition Survey: Headline Results from Year 1 of the Rolling Programme (2008/2009); Food Standards Agency: London, UK, 2010.
[9]
Wright, J.; Wang, C.; Kennedy-Stephenson, J.; Ervin, R. Dietary Intake of Ten Key Nutrients for Public Health, United States: 1999–2000; Advance data from vital and health statistics No. 334; U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics: Hyattsville, MD, USA, 2003.
[10]
Ervin, R.; Wright, J.; Wang, C.; Kennedy-Stephenson, J. Dietary Intake of Fats and Fatty Acids for the United States Population: 1999–2000; Advance data from vital and health statistics No. 348; Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics: Hyattsville, MD, USA, 2004.
[11]
Crowe, F.L.; Skeaff, C.M.; Green, T.J.; Gray, A.R. Serum n-3 long-chain PUFA differ by sex and age in a population-based survey of New Zealand adolescents and adults. Br. J. Nutr.?2007, 99, 168–174.
[12]
Dewailly, E.; Blanchet, C.; Gingras, S.; Lemieux, S.; Sauvé, L.; Bergeron, J.; Holub, B.J. Relations between n-3 fatty acid status and cardiovascular disease risk factors among Quebecers. Am. J. Clin. Nutr.?2001, 74, 603–611.
[13]
Dewailly, E.; Blanchet, C.; Lemieux, S.; Sauvé, L.; Gingras, S.; Ayotte, P.; Holub, J.H. n-3 Fatty acids and cardiovascular disease risk factors among the Inuit of Nunavik. Am. J. Clin. Nutr.?2001, 74, 464–473.
[14]
Tavendale, R.; Lee, A.J.; Smith, W.C.; Tunstall-Pedoe, H. Adipose tissue fatty acids in Scottish men and women: Results from the Scottish Heart Health Study. Atherosclerosis?1992, 94, 161–169.
[15]
Asciutti-Moura, L.S.; Guilland, J.C.; Fuchs, F.; Richard, D.; Klepping, J. Fatty acid composition of serum lipids and its relation to diet in an elderly institutionalized population. Am. J. Clin. Nutr.?1988, 48, 980–987.
[16]
Pawlosky, R.J.; Hibbeln, J.R.; Salem, N. Compartmental analyses of plasma n-3 essential fatty acids among male and female smokers and nonsmokers. J. Lipid Res.?2007, 48, 935–943.
[17]
Simon, J.A.; Fong, J.; Bemert, J.T.; Browner, W.S. Relation of smoking and alcohol consumption to serum fatty acids. Am. J. Epidemiol.?1996, 144, 325–334.
[18]
Leng, G.C.; Smith, F.B.; Fowkes, F.G.; Horrobin, D.F.; Ells, K.; Morse-Fisher, N.; Lowe, G.D. Relationship between plasma essential fatty acids and smoking, serum lipids, blood pressure and haemostatic and rheological factors. Prostaglandins Leukot. Essent. Fatty Acids?1994, 51, 101–108.
[19]
Cambien, F.; Warnet, J.M.; Vernier, V.; Ducimetiere, P.; Jacqueson, A.; Flament, C.; Orssaud, G.; Richard, J.L.; Claude, J.R. An epidemiologic appraisal of the associations between the fatty acids esterifying serum cholesterol and some cardiovascular risk factos in middle-aged men. Am. J. Epidemiol.?1988, 127, 75–86.
[20]
Helge, J.W.; Wu, B.J.; Willer, M.; Daugaard, J.R.; Storlien, L.H.; Kiens, B. Training affects muscle phospholipid fatty acid composition in humans. J. Appl. Physiol.?2001, 90, 670–677.
[21]
Callow, J.; Summers, L.K.M.; Bradshaw, H.; Frayn, K.N. Changes in LDL particle composition after the consumption of meals containing different amounts and types of fat. Am. J. Clin. Nutr.?2002, 76, 345–350.
[22]
Cohen, J.C.; Noakes, T.D.; Benade, A.J.S. Serum triglyceride responses to fatty meals: Effects of meal fat content. Am. J. Clin. Nutr.?1998, 47, 825–827.
[23]
Crowe, F.L.; Allen, N.E.; Appleby, P.N.; Overvad, K.; Aardestrup, I.V.; Johnsen, N.F.; Tj?nneland, A.; Linseisen, J.; Kaaks, R.; Boeing, H.; et al. Fatty acid composition of plasma phospholipids and risk of prostate cancer in a case-control analysis nested within the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition. Am. J. Clin. Nutr.?2008, 88, 1353–1363. 18996872
[24]
Elliott, P.; Peakman, T.C. The UK Biobank sample handling and storage protocol for the collection, processing and archiving of human blood and urine. Int. J. Epidemiol.?2008, 37, 234–244.
[25]
Arab, L.; Akbar, J. Biomarkers and the measurement of fatty acids. Public Health Nutr.?2002, 5, 865–871.