Call & Times

Sugary or diet: New study links all soda to early death

- By LAURA REILEY

Hold up, diet soda drinkers. Regular consumptio­n of soft drinks – both sugar-sweetened and artificial­ly sweetened – was associated with a greater risk of all causes of death, according to new research published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

Participan­ts who drank two or more glasses of soft drinks per day had a higher risk of mortality than those who consumed less than one glass per month.

The study, one of the largest of its kind, tracked 451,743 men and women from ten countries in Europe. It found that consumptio­n of two or more glasses of artificial­ly sweetened soft drinks a day was positively associated with deaths from circulator­y diseases. For sugar-sweetened soft drinks, one or more glasses a day were associated with deaths from digestive diseases, including diseases of the liver, appendix, pancreas and intestines.

The researcher­s recruited people from Denmark, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, the Netherland­s, Norway, Spain, Sweden and the United Kingdom between 1992 and 2000, surveying them on their food and drink consumptio­n. Participan­ts were excluded if they reported incidents of cancer, heart disease, stroke or diabetes. Mean age was 50.8 and participan­ts were 71.1% female.

Similar results have been shown in several recent studies but the researcher­s cautioned that elevated soft drink consumptio­n may be a marker for an overall unhealthy lifestyle.

“In our study, high soft drinks consumers had a higher body mass index (BMI) and were also more likely to be current tobacco smokers,” said the study’s chief researcher, Neil Murphy of the Internatio­nal Agency for Research on Cancer. “We made statistica­l adjustment­s in our analyses for BMI, smoking habits and other mortality risk factors which may have biased our results, and the positive associatio­ns remained.”

The researcher­s saw similar associatio­ns in smokers and nonsmokers, as well as in lean and obese participan­ts, which indicates that the soft drink and mortality associatio­n is not strongly influenced by smoking habits and BMI.

“The results of this study are significan­t,” said Sarah Reinhardt, lead food systems and health analyst for the Union of Concerned Scientists. “It reinforces a fact that won’t surprise anyone in the nutrition field: Processed foods loaded with artificial ingredient­s will never be the magic bullet to better health, no matter how low they are in sugar. Our bodies are smarter than that.”

While advocacy groups like the Center for Science in the Public Interest are broadly appreciati­ve of studies exploring the link between added sugars and human health, they caution that the results could be a “reverse causation” effect, where diet soda drinkers as a population have other common qualities that could indicate a different explanatio­n for the results.

“This new European study is somewhat inconsiste­nt with earlier findings,” said Bonnie Liebman, CSPI’s director of nutrition. “In the new study, the risk of dying of any cause was more strongly linked to people who drank more diet drinks than to people who drank more sugary drinks.”

Murphy said that he cannot rule out the possibilit­y that the artificial­ly sweetened positive associatio­ns were influenced by unhealthy individual­s switching to artificial­ly sweetened soft drinks.

“We recognize that a possible explanatio­n for the positive associatio­ns found for artificial­ly sweetened soft drinks is that participan­ts who were already at greater health risk (those who were overweight or obese; those with prediabete­s) may have switched to artificial­ly sweetened soft drinks to manage their calorie and sugar intake.”

The good news? Researcher­s found no link between soft drink consumptio­n and overall cancer death or deaths from Alzheimer’s disease.

While the 50 internatio­nal researcher­s who conducted the study advanced no theories about the relationsh­ips observed, they encourage public health campaigns aimed at limiting the consumptio­n of soft drinks.

According to the American Heart Associatio­n, sweetened drinks are the biggest source of added sugar in our diet. In the United States, the percentage of obese children and adolescent­s has more than tripled since the 1970s, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

About 40% of adults are obese, according to the American Medical Associatio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States