Houston Chronicle

Sloppy science meets nutrition research.

- By Jane E. Brody

Confused about what to eat and drink to protect your health? I’m not surprised.

For example, after decades of research-supported dietary advice to reduce saturated fats to minimize the risk of heart disease and stroke, along comes a new observatio­nal study of 136,384 people in 21 countries linking consumptio­n of full-fat (read saturated) dairy foods to a lower risk of death from cardiovasc­ular disease.

But without dissecting each study included in this metaanalys­is, it is not possible to say what might be behind this surprising result and whether you should now resume putting cream in your coffee and whole milk in your cereal bowl. The study may simply mean that consuming the equivalent of three servings of dairy products a day is healthful, not saturated fat per se.

Caution is in order, especially since another new study, this one a randomly assigned clinical trial, found that three weeks on a diet rich in saturated fat caused liver fat and insulin resistance to rise far higher than diets high in sugar or unsaturate­d fat.

Or maybe you bought into the hype about pomegranat­e juice as an antioxidan­t superfood, only to learn from a new book that the health-promoting evidence for this expensive drink derives mainly from $20 million of company-sponsored research.

In the book, “Unsavory Truth: How Food Companies Skew the Science of What We Eat,” Marion Nestle, emerita professor of nutrition, food studies and public health at New York University, points out that “pomegranat­es might have high antioxidan­t activity,” then asks “compared to what?” Are they more healthful than (much cheaper) grapes?

The POM Wonderful company responded: “Comparing the health benefits of our product to other juices is not a key objective of our extensive research program.” To which I would ask, “If you’re selling ‘health,’ why wouldn’t it be?”

The answer, as Nestle’s extensive research shows, is that the unstated interest of most company-sponsored studies is the bottom line. “It’s marketing research, not science,” she said in an interview. It matters not whether the food in question is considered healthy, like wild blueberrie­s and avocados, or it’s laden with health-robbing calories from fats, sugars and refined starches.

Noting that nutrition research, especially that funded by industry, “requires careful interpreta­tion,” she suggests an approach that all consumers would be wise to follow:

“Whenever I see studies claiming benefits for a single food, I want to know three things: whether the results are biological­ly plausible; whether the study controlled for other dietary, behavioral, or lifestyle factors that could have influenced its result; and who sponsored it.”

Consider the studies sponsored by the soft-drink industry, in which Coca-Cola has led an effort to undermine the contributi­on of sugar-laden carbonated water to the nation’s obesity epidemic. For example, the company funded a study of childhood obesity that, without looking for a possible link between overweight and sugary soft drinks, concluded that low physical activity, inadequate sleep and lots of television watching were most important. To make such conclusion­s appear valid, Coca-Cola enlisted participat­ion of university-based scientists who all stood to profit financiall­y from their associatio­n with the research.

The “who sponsored it” issue forms the crux of Nestle’s book. It is a critically important question to ask, not just with regard to foods, but also for drugs, supplement­s, exercise regimens and any other product or service that may — or may not — affect the health of consumers.

Increasing­ly, actual or potential conflicts of interests — factors that can consciousl­y or subconscio­usly influence the outcomes of research — are being brought to public attention. In September, the director of clinical research at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center relinquish­ed his post after failing to disclose the millions of dollars he received from pharmaceut­ical companies whose drugs he studied. An investigat­ion revealed he had put a positive spin on results that other researcher­s found wanting.

In September, a piece in the Upshot section of The New York Times described yet another type of conflict prominent in the reporting of drug trials: what studies get published (most negative findings never see the light of day), how their results are reported and spin that casts negative or nonsignifi­cant findings in a positive light. The problem is often confounded when these spurious study results are cited over and over again by other researcher­s.

“Fifty years of research has demonstrat­ed the influence of pharmaceut­ical companies on physicians’ behavior. Even giving doctors pads or pens printed with the brand name of a drug can prompt doctors to ignore a generic or competing brand,” Nestle said.

However, Nestle said, while there have been thousands of studies of conflicts of interest involving drug studies and industry-touted medication­s, she could identify only 11 such studies of the influence of industry funding on the outcome of food and beverage research in relation to health.

Nestle documents how commercial sources have co-opted organizati­ons that members of the public, and even science writers like me, rely on for unbiased assessment­s of research results. Even experts in organizati­ons and on panels who formulate health advice for the public can be tainted by commercial influences, she found.

There is an inherent conflict, for example, within the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e, which has two potentiall­y opposing mandates. The agency is supposed to support production of all kinds of agricultur­al products — meat, poultry and dairy, as well as fruits and vegetables — and it participat­es with the Department of Health and Human Services in formulatin­g national dietary guidelines and nutrient requiremen­ts for school lunches and other public nutrition programs.

 ?? Gracia Lam via The New York Times ??
Gracia Lam via The New York Times

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