In a recent study published in the British Journal of Nutrition, Spencer et al. (Reference Spencer, Abd El Mohsen, Minihane and Mathers1) reviewed the strengths and the limitations of the biomarkers of dietary polyphenol intake, since nutritional biomarkers may be a better measure of dietary exposure than self-reported dietary data. These authors identified the criteria that must be considered in the development of such biomarkers as the following: (i) robust methodology; (ii) sensitivity; (iii) specificity; (iv) bioavailability. Different polyphenols were reviewed as potential biomarkers by the authors; we suggest that resveratrol should also be considered. We analysed resveratrol metabolites as potential biomarkers of wine consumption in two randomised cross-over trials and a cohort study(Reference Zamora-Ros, Urpí-Sardà, Lamuela-Raventós, Estruch, Vázquez-Agell, Serrano-Martínez, Jaeger and Andres-Lacueva2). Using a cut-off of 90 nmol/g, we were able to use urinary total resveratrol metabolite concentration to differentiate wine consumers from abstainers with a sensitivity of 72 % (60–84 %) and a specificity of 94 % (87–100 %). In these trials, urinary resveratrol was specific, as wine has been reported as the most important source of dietary resveratrol (98·4 %)(Reference Zamora-Ros, Andres-Lacueva and Lamuela-Raventós3), has an adequate half-life and provided a good correlation between these measured values and the dietary data reported (r 0·654; P < 0·001). In addition, there is a robust analytical technique(Reference Urpí-Sardà, Jáuregui, Lamuela-Raventós, Jaeger, Miksits, Covas and Andres-Lacueva4, Reference Urpi-Sarda, Zamora-Ros, Lamuela-Raventos, Cherubini, Jauregui, de la Torre, Covas, Estruch, Jaeger and Andres-Lacueva5) using LC-MS-MS to determine urinary resveratrol metabolites and their pharmacokinetic parameters have been recently studied by Boocock et al. (Reference Boocock, Faust and Patel6).
Taking these points into consideration, we want to propose urinary resveratrol metabolites as a biomarker of grape product consumption; this would be a new nutritional biomarker which accomplish and fulfil the criteria of Spencer et al. (Reference Spencer, Abd El Mohsen, Minihane and Mathers1).
We declare no conflict of interest.