Journal article

Sex Differences in Supplement Intake in Recreational Endurance Runners-Results from the NURMI Study (Step 2)


Authors listWirnitzer, Katharina; Motevalli, Mohamad; Tanous, Derrick R.; Gregori, Martina; Wirnitzer, Gerold; Leitzmann, Claus; Rosemann, Thomas; Knechtle, Beat

Publication year2021

JournalNutrients

Volume number13

Issue number8

eISSN2072-6643

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.3390/nu13082776

PublisherMDPI


Abstract
It has been well-documented that female and male athletes differ in many physiological and psychological characteristics related to endurance performance. This sex-based difference appears to be associated with their nutritional demands including the patterns of supplement intake. However, there is a paucity of research addressing the sex differences in supplement intake amongst distance runners. The present study aimed to investigate and compare supplement intake between female and male distance runners (10 km, half-marathon, (ultra-)marathon) and the potential associations with diet type and race distance. A total of 317 runners participated in an online survey, and 220 distance runners (127 females and 93 males) made up the final sample after a multi-stage data clearance. Participants were also assigned to dietary (omnivorous, vegetarian, vegan) and race distance (10-km, half-marathon, marathon/ultra-marathon) subgroups. Sociodemographic characteristics and the patterns of supplement intake including type, frequency, dosage, and brands were collected using a questionnaire. One-way ANOVA and logistic regression were used for data analysis. A total of 54.3% of female runners and 47.3% male runners reported consuming supplements regularly. The frequency of supplement intake was similar between females and males (generally or across dietary and distance subgroups). There was no significant relationship for sex alone or sex interactions with diet type and race distance on supplement intake (p < 0.05). However, a non-significant higher intake of vitamin and mineral (but not CHO/protein) supplements was reported by vegan and vegetarian (but not by omnivorous) females compared to their male counterparts. In summary, despite the reported findings, sex could not be considered as a strong modulator of supplement intake among different groups of endurance runners.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleWirnitzer, K., Motevalli, M., Tanous, D., Gregori, M., Wirnitzer, G., Leitzmann, C., et al. (2021) Sex Differences in Supplement Intake in Recreational Endurance Runners-Results from the NURMI Study (Step 2), Nutrients, 13(8), Article 2776. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13082776

APA Citation styleWirnitzer, K., Motevalli, M., Tanous, D., Gregori, M., Wirnitzer, G., Leitzmann, C., Rosemann, T., & Knechtle, B. (2021). Sex Differences in Supplement Intake in Recreational Endurance Runners-Results from the NURMI Study (Step 2). Nutrients. 13(8), Article 2776. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu13082776



Keywords


athletesCOLLEGEDIETARY SUPPLEMENTATIONDIETETICSENDURANCEergogenic aidsGender differencesGENDER-DIFFERENCESNUTRITIONAL SUPPLEMENTSplant-basedrunning


SDG Areas


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:29