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Recent research suggests that the consumption of ultra-processed foods may lead to the emergence of type 2 diabetes and increased mortality rates, with certain food additive combinations potentially posing health risks. A study conducted in France identified five common food additive mixtures associated with a higher incidence of type 2 diabetes, independent of overall diet quality, while a separate analysis across eight countries indicated that increased consumption of ultra-processed foods was linked to a higher risk of premature mortality.
Recent research links the emergence of type 2 diabetes and increases in mortality rates to the consumption of ultra-processed foods.
According to a study, combining certain food additives might constitute a breeding ground for previously unidentified health consequences.
Additive combinations are common in ultra-processed food as they increase shelf life and determine the texture, taste and appearance of many packaged products.
See Also:Health NewsThe research is part of a broad ongoing investigation about health and diet promoted by the French National Institute for Health and Medical Research.
The study published in PLOS Medicine investigated the eating habits of more than 108,000 French adults over seven years.
All participants provided extensive information at baseline, including lifestyle, health status, health history and medical treatments, dietary habits, physical activity level as well as basic information such as age, sex, height and weight, smoking status, number of children and professional occupation.
Participants provided extensive dietary records at baseline and every six months, and daily dietary intakes for nutrients, energy, food and food additives were calculated.
These records, along with the commercial brand names of the industrial products, allowed researchers to quantify the food additives ingested by participants. The researchers found a list of 269 food additives being consumed.
“To obtain a reliable estimate of food additive exposure and to focus on those most likely to have substantial public health impact, only those consumed by at least five percent of the cohort were included in the mixture modeling,” the scientists wrote.
This modeling allowed researchers to identify five food additive mixtures that were most commonly consumed.
Two of these mixtures were associated with a higher incidence of type 2 diabetes, independently of the nutritional quality of the overall diet of the surveyed consumers.
“The first mixture primarily consisted of emulsifiers, preservatives and a dye, while the second mixture was characterized by acidifiers, acid regulators, dyes, artificial sweeteners and emulsifiers,” the researchers wrote.
To pinpoint the emergence of type 2 diabetes, scientists used Cox proportional hazards regression models.
These are statistical tools commonly used in epidemiological studies to analyze the association between exposures (like food additives) and the time until an event occurs, such as the incidence of type 2 diabetes.
These models were adjusted for potential socio-demographic, anthropometric, lifestyle and dietary confounders.
According to the researchers, the results suggest that food additives found in various products and frequently consumed together may represent a risk factor for type 2 diabetes.
They warned that more research should be conducted to investigate individual additives’ relative influence and interactions.
See Also:Low-Carb Mediterranean Diet Aids Diabetes Patients in Achieving RemissionThe study’s limitations include possible exposure and outcome measurement errors, and causality cannot be established based on this observational study alone.
A second study, conducted by researchers in eight countries characterized by different income levels, suggested that ultra-processed food consumption might cause premature mortality in varying degrees worldwide.
The research, published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, aimed to estimate the association between ultra-processed food consumption and all-cause mortality and quantify the share of premature deaths attributable to ultra-processed foods in these countries in a population between 30 and 69 years of age.
The researchers conducted a dose – response meta-analysis using data from seven prospective cohort studies involving 239,982 participants and 14,779 deaths.
This kind of meta-analysis takes into account existing studies to identify how changes in the amount (dose) of an exposure (such as a food, nutrient, drug or behavior) are related to changes in the risk or effect of an outcome (such as disease, death or recovery).
Using a random-effects model, the authors calculated the pooled relative risk of all-cause mortality for every ten percent increase in the daily energy intake from ultra-processed foods.
According to the models, this methodology allowed the researchers to account for study variations.
Then, using dietary intake data from national nutrition surveys and mortality data from the Global Burden of Disease Study, they estimated the population attributable fractions of premature deaths due to ultra-processed food consumption in Colombia, Brazil, Chile, Mexico, Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom and the United States.
The Global Burden of Disease Study is a large international research initiative that measures and compares the impact of diseases, injuries and risk factors on population health worldwide.
The meta-analysis revealed a linear relationship: each ten percent increase in ultra-processed food consumption was associated with a 2.7 percent increase in the risk of all-cause mortality.
Ultra-processed food intake varied widely, from 15 percent of individual energy intake in Colombia to 54.5 percent in the U.S.
The impact of premature deaths linked to ultra-processed food consumption varied significantly among countries, from 3.9 percent in Colombia to nearly 14 percent in the U.K. and the U.S.
However, the study has limitations, such as a narrow number of cohort studies based on common criteria and confounding data that could emerge in observational studies being considered.
Additionally, it does not account for the time lag between dietary changes and mortality outcomes.
Nevertheless, according to the authors, the results align with growing evidence linking ultra-processed foods to numerous adverse health outcomes, reinforcing the urgency of addressing their role in diet-related diseases.
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