Protein, a key nutrient for health, has a number of significant roles in the body including being a component of skeletal muscle, and so is integral in the prevention of sarcopenia( Reference Gibney 1 , Reference Welch 2 ). However, there is limited knowledge of the contribution of different types of protein (namely animal and plant based) which have been associated with other diseases such as Type II diabetes( Reference van Nielen 3 ). The purpose of this study was to investigate sources of protein as there are currently no recommendations regarding the source or quality of protein to be consumed, and little previous research has investigated the contributing sources to the UK diet.
We analysed a random representative sub-cohort of the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition – Norfolk (EPIC-Norfolk cohort of ~25,000 men and women) comprised of 4443 men and women aged 39–80. We aimed to identify the contributing sources to total dietary protein %en (percentage of energy) from four aggregated variables of protein intake derived from 7-day food diaries, by quintiles of intake. These categories were animal-land (meat and meat products), animal-marine (fish, seafood), animal-derived (e.g. milk, cheese, eggs) and plant (all protein from plant sources). The average protein intake %en was 15·0% and 15·8% for men and women, respectively. Total animal protein intake accounted for a mean of 10·1% and 10·8% of energy intake for men and women respectively, whilst plant protein accounted for 4·7% of energy for both men and women. All analyses were conducted in Stata, version 11·0.
The contribution of protein sources differed across quintiles of total protein %en. Increases in land and marine based protein (P trend < 0·001) and decreases in plant and animal derived intakes were seen with increasing total protein %en (P trend < 0·001 and 0·03, respectively).
In conclusion protein intake for both men and women in this study was predominantly from animal sources. Further investigation of the sources of protein and differences in quality of associated nutrients may be important for sarcopenia and other non-communicable chronic diseases.