Italian Dietary Supplement Label Database: History
Please note this is an old version of this entry, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Dietary Supplement Label Database in Italy  is developed, as one of first works describing the procedure of coding dietary supplements through the FoodEx2 classification system and could be a useful tool/guide for other compilers and users.

  • Italian Dietary Supplement Label Database
  • Dietary supplements
  • Food description
  • Food classification
  • FoodEx2

The sector of food supplements is certainly varied and growing: a wider and wider selection of new products is launched on the market every year. This is reflected in new reorganization of drug companies, in new marketing strategies, and in the adoption of new production technologies with resulting changes in the dietary supplements regulation. The growth of this sector is encouraged by growing interest of consumers in improving their health and physical and mental wellbeing, often to compensate for an incorrect lifestyle. Dietary supplements are considered in epidemiological studies and in the analysis of food consumption patterns.

In this context, information on composition reported on the product labels of selected dietary supplements has been collected and updated for the development of a Dietary Supplement Label Database for Italy, according to products’ availability on the Italian market and also including items from both the third Italian National Food Consumption Survey, INRAN-SCAI 2005-06 database  and the ongoing Italian national dietary survey IV SCAI. The design and construction of a food database requires above all identifying foods through an adequate food nomenclature and a precise description. The FoodEx2 system has been used for the classification and description of dietary supplements in the aforementioned database.

FoodEx2 is a standardized food classification and description system developed by EFSA to better describe characteristics of foods and dietary supplements in exposure assessment studies; this system, nowadays at revised version 2, consists of flexible combinations of classifications and descriptions based on a hierarchical system for different food safety-related domains (i.e., food consumption, chemical contaminants, pesticide residues, zoonoses and food composition). 

A total of 558 products have been entered into the database at present, with the aim of providing an adequate representation of the major classes of food supplements. For each item, a code was assigned following the food classification and description system FoodEx2, revision 2, to allow standardization and harmonization of the data among different countries and to guarantee interoperability between different databases. Moreover, various suggestions on how the number of FoodEx2 system descriptors could be expanded were noted during the compilation of the database and the coding procedure.

The main feature of a database dedicated to food supplements is its intrinsic dynamism linked to the frequent changes in the formulation of food supplements, with the consequent need to monitor the market and update the database regularly, both by inserting new formulations and expanding the number of descriptors. A precise and available description of the dietary supplements through coding is essential to recognize the type, the main ingredients, and the target consumers by users from different countries.

This database can be useful in different contexts, such as, for example, in clinical trials, dietary plans and pharmacological programs, but also to expand the food composition databases for the purpose of daily nutrient intake estimations.

 

This entry is adapted from the peer-reviewed paper 10.3390/nu12010089

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