The Hindu (Mangalore)

30-year study links ultra-processed food to risk of early death

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Higher consumptio­n of most ultra-processed foods is linked to a slightly higher risk of death, with readyto-eat meat, poultry, and seafood based products, sugary drinks, dairy based desserts, and highly processed breakfast foods showing the strongest associatio­ns, ‡nds a 30-year U.S. observatio­nal study. The results were published in the journal The BMJ.

The researcher­s say not all ultra-processed food products should be universall­y restricted, but that their ‡ndings “provide support for limiting consumptio­n of certain types of ultra-processed food for long term health”. Mounting evidence links ultraproce­ssed foods to higher risks of obesity, heart disease, diabetes and bowel cancer, but few long term studies have examined links to all causes and cause speci‡c deaths, especially due to cancer.

To address this knowledge gap, researcher­s tracked the long-term health of 74,563 female registered nurses from 11 States in the Nurses’

Health Study (1984-2018) and 39,501 male health profession­als from all 50 U.S. states in the Health Profession­als Follow-up Study (1986-2018) with no history of cancer, cardiovasc­ular diseases, or diabetes at study enrolment.

Every two years participan­ts provided informatio­n on their health and lifestyle habits, and every four years they completed a detailed food questionna­ire. Overall dietary quality was also assessed using the Alternativ­e Healthy Eating Index-2010 (AHEI) score. During an average 34-year follow-up period, the researcher­s identi‡ed 48,193 deaths, including 13,557 deaths due to cancer, 11,416 deaths due to cardiovasc­ular diseases, 3,926 deaths due to respirator­y diseases, and 6,343 deaths due to neurodegen­erative diseases.

Compared with participan­ts in the lowest quarter of ultra-processed food intake (average three servings per day), those in the highest quarter (average seven servings per day) had a 4% higher risk of total deaths and a 9% higher risk of other deaths, including an 8% higher risk of neurodegen­erative deaths.

No associatio­ns were found for deaths due to cardiovasc­ular diseases, cancer, or respirator­y diseases. In absolute numbers, the rate of death from any cause among participan­ts in the lowest and highest quarter of ultraproce­ssed food intake was 1,472 and 1,536 per 100,000 person years, respective­ly.

The associatio­n between ultra-processed food intake and death varied across speci‡c food groups, with meat, poultry, and seafood based ready-to-eat products showing the strongest and most consistent associatio­ns, followed by sugar sweetened and arti‡cially sweetened beverages, dairy based desserts, and ultraproce­ssed breakfast food. The associatio­n was less pronounced after overall dietary quality was taken into account, suggesting that dietary quality has a stronger inˆuence on long term health than ultra-processed food consumptio­n, note the authors.

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