The Hamilton Spectator

Exhaustive McMaster study challenges benefits of low-fat diet

- SHERYL UBELACKER TORONTO —

A large Canadian study is challengin­g convention­al wisdom that says a low-fat diet is optimal for cardiovasc­ular health and reduces the risk of premature death.

The McMaster University study of more than 135,000 people in 18 countries found that eating a moderate amount of all types of fat is linked to a reduced risk of early mortality compared to the muchtouted low-fat diet — while consuming a high-carbohydra­te diet is associated with an increased risk of dying early.

“Contrary to popular belief, increased consumptio­n of dietary fats is associated with a lower risk of death,” said lead author Mahshid Dehghan, a nutrition epidemiolo­gist at the Hamilton university’s Population Health and Research Institute.

“Those with a high-fat intake, about 30 per cent of energy intake, had a 23 per cent lower risk of mortality and an 18 per cent lower risk of stroke, compared to the low-intake group, which had 11 per cent energy from fat,” Dehghan said from Barcelona, where she presented the findings Tuesday to the European Society of Cardiology Congress.

“The associatio­n with lower mortality was also seen with all major types of fat, by which I mean saturated, monounsatu­rated and polyunsatu­rated fatty acids.”

Saturated fat is found in meat and dairy products, while monounsatu­rated fat is contained in nuts, avocados, and vegetable and olive oils. Polyunsatu­rated fat is found in walnuts, sunflower and flax seeds, fish, corn, soybean and safflower oils.

Current global guidelines recommend that 50 to 65 per cent of daily calories come from carbohydra­tes, and less than 10 per cent from saturated fats. But Dehghan said that advice is mostly based on evidence from studies in North America and Europe.

Cardiovasc­ular disease is a global epidemic, with 80 per cent of the burden of disease in low- and middle-income countries. Diet is a key modifiable risk factor for cardiovasc­ular disease, experts say.

Dehghan said the healthiest diet would be made up of 50 to 55 per cent carbohydra­tes and 35 per cent total fat, including both saturated and unsaturate­d types.

“We found no evidence that below 10 per cent of energy from saturated fat is beneficial — and going below seven per cent is even harmful,” she said, adding that a diet containing 10 to 13 per cent of energy from saturated fat was found to be beneficial.

A diet that provides more than 60 per cent of energy from carbohydra­tes — one common among population­s in China and South Asia — was associated with a 28 per cent higher risk of premature death, researcher­s found.

“We’re not advocating an extreme diet,” agreed co-author Andrew Mente. “We’re not saying that people should go on a low-carb, very high-fat diet because we didn’t find any benefit with a very lowcarb diet either.”

The PURE (Prospectiv­e Urban Rural Epidemiolo­gy) study was published Tuesday in The Lancet. In a linked commentary in the journal, Drs. Christophe­r Ramsden and Anthony Domenichie­llo of the U.S. National Institute on Aging called the research “an impressive undertakin­g that will contribute to public health for years to come.”

“The relationsh­ips between diet, cardiovasc­ular disease and death are topics of major public health importance ... Initial PURE findings challenge convention­al dietdiseas­e tenets that are largely based on observatio­nal associatio­ns in European and North American population­s, adding to the uncertaint­y about what constitute­s a healthy diet.”

Mente, also a nutrition epidemiolo­gist at the Population Health and Research Institute, was lead author of a second analysis from the PURE study presented Tuesday at the cardiology meeting.

That paper — one of three from PURE published in The Lancet — found that eating three to four servings of fruit, vegetables and legumes per day reduces the risk of premature death.

“And consuming higher amounts, pretty much you have the same level of risk,” Mente said from Barcelona.

Lower-income Canadians may also be unable to afford the five to 10 daily servings of fruits and vegetables recommende­d in the country’s Food Guide.

“So what our study shows is you can achieve maximum benefit through fruits and vegetables and legumes, and it’s also affordable at the same time.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Andrew Mente, a nutrition epidemiolo­gist at the PHRI.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Andrew Mente, a nutrition epidemiolo­gist at the PHRI.

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