Iran Daily

New French study explores risks of ultra-processed food

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A major French study found for the ¿rst time a link between the consumptio­n of ultra-processed foods and a higher risk of death, but researcher­s warned more work was needed to determine which mechanisms were at play.

The study, which involved monitoring the diets of tens of thousands of French people between 2009 and 2017, found a modest link between increased consumptio­n of ultra-processed foods — characteri­zed as ready-to-eat or -heat formulatio­ns — and a heightened mortality risk during that period, medicalxpr­ess. com wrote.

The results were published in JAMA Internal Medicine published by the American Medical Associatio­n.

But “we shouldn’t be alarmist, or say that eating a packaged meal gives you a 15-percent higher chance of dying,” cautioned Mathilde Touvier, director of the nutritiona­l epidemiolo­gy research team at Paris 13 University, which managed the Nutrinet-sante study along with teams from Inserm, Inra and CNAM.

“It’s another step in our understand­ing of the link between ultra-processed food and health,” she added.

The relationsh­ip between diet and disease is complex and the results of studies are frequently misinterpr­eted.

Last year, the same French team published a study on organic food and how it related to the risk of cancer.

A higher rate of cancer was found in people who ate less organic food — but the study did not conclude there was a causal link — though that did not stop many media outlets from headlining the cancer¿ghting effects of organic food.

Some 45,000 people over the age of 45, a majority of whom were women, took part in the latest study. Every six months, they were asked to ¿ll out three online surveys, randomly assigned over two weeks, on everything they ate or drank over a 24-hour period.

After seven years, about 600 people died. The researcher­s then crunched the numbers and found that a 10 percent increase in the proportion of ultra-processed foods in the diet correspond­ed to a 15 percent increase in mortality.

But Touvier warned that rather than focus on the ¿gure, what matters is the existence of a statistica­lly signi¿cant correlatio­n — and the study is one part of growing body of work on the matter.

Ultra-processed foods come under group four of the NOVA food classi¿cation system recognized by health agencies including the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on.

They have undergone several transforma­tion processes including heating at high temperatur­es and the presence of additives, emulsi¿ers and texturizer­s. Many ready-to-heat products that are rich in salt or sugar and low in vitamins and ¿ber fall under this category.

Last year, French researcher­s published results from the same Nutrinet-sante study, observing more cancers among heavy consumers of these foods.

Since it is not possible for ethical reasons to conduct a controlled experiment in which one group eats ultraproce­ssed foods and the other does not, observatio­nal studies are the only option.

But they are inevitably Àawed, hinging on accurate self-reporting, while there are also a myriad of other ‘invisible’ factors at play — even though the results are adjusted to compensate for sociodemog­raphic criteria and the overall quality of the diet.

The burning question remains, what is it about these foods that causes negative impacts on health?

One popular hypothesis is the presence of additives, which have been studied in lab conditions on cells and on rats, notably by the French National Institute for Agricultur­al Research (INRA)

The study is ‘an important contributi­on to the literature’ on the subject, Casey Rebholz, Assistant Professor of Epidemiolo­gy at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health told AFP, who noted the methodolog­y was robust despite the inherent limitation­s of studies of this nature.

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