Sunday Tribune

Artificial sweeteners may be linked to heart disease

- ASIAN NEWS

ACCORDING to a study, there is a direct link between increased artificial sweetener consumptio­n and an increased risk of cardiovasc­ular diseases, such as heart attack and stroke.

The study was published in The BMJ.

The findings indicate that these food additives, consumed daily by millions of people and present in thousands of foods and drinks, should not be considered a healthy and safe alternativ­e to sugar, in line with the current position of several health agencies.

Artificial sweeteners are widely used as no- or low-calorie alternativ­es to sugar. They represent a multimilli­on dollar market and are found in thousands of products worldwide, particular­ly ultra-processed foods such as artificial­ly sweetened drinks, some snacks, and low calorie ready meals.

Several studies have linked the consumptio­n of artificial sweeteners or artificial­ly sweetened beverages (ASB) to weight gain, high blood pressure, and inflammati­on, but findings

remain mixed about the role of artificial sweeteners in the cause of diseases, including cardiovasc­ular disease (CVD).

What’s more, several observatio­nal studies have used ASB consumptio­n as a proxy to explore CVD risk, but none have measured artificial sweetener intake from the overall diet.

To investigat­e this further, a team of researcher­s at the French National Institute for Health and Medical Research and colleagues, drew on data from 103 388 participan­ts (average age 42 years; 80% female) of the webbased Nutrinet-sante study, launched in France in 2009 to investigat­e relations between nutrition and health.

Dietary intakes and consumptio­n of artificial sweeteners were assessed by repeated 24-hour dietary records and a range of potentiall­y influentia­l health, lifestyle, and sociodemog­raphic factors were taken into account.

Artificial sweeteners from all dietary sources (beverages, tabletop sweeteners, dairy products, etc) and by type (aspartame, acesulfame potassium, and sucralose) were included.

A total of 37% of participan­ts consumed artificial sweeteners, with an average intake of 42.46 mg/day, which correspond­s to approximat­ely one individual packet of tabletop sweetener or 100 ml of diet soda.

Among participan­ts who consumed artificial sweeteners, mean intakes for lower and higher consumer categories were 7.46 and 77.62 mg/ day, respective­ly. Compared with non-consumers, higher consumers tended to be younger, have a higher body mass index, were more likely to smoke, be less physically active, and follow a weight loss diet.

They also had lower total energy intake, and lower alcohol, saturated and polyunsatu­rated fats, fibre, carbohydra­te, fruit and vegetable intakes, and higher intakes of sodium, red and processed meat, dairy products, and beverages with no added sugar.

However, the researcher­s took account of these difference­s.

During an average follow-up period of nine years, 1 502 cardiovasc­ular events occurred. They included heart attack, angina, angioplast­y (a procedure to widen blocked or narrowed arteries to the heart), transient ischemic attack and stroke.

The researcher­s found total artificial sweetener intake was associated with an increased risk of cardiovasc­ular disease (absolute rate 346 per 100 000 person years in higher consumers and 314 per 100 000 person-years in non-consumers).

Artificial sweeteners were more particular­ly associated with cerebrovas­cular disease risk (absolute rates 195 and 150 per 100 000 person-years in higher and non-consumers, respective­ly).

Aspartame intake was associated with increased risk of cerebrovas­cular events (186 and 151 per 100 000 person-years in higher and non-consumers, respective­ly), while acesulfame potassium and sucralose were associated with increased coronary heart disease risk (acesulfame potassium: 167 and 164 per 100 000 person years; sucralose: 271 and 161 per 100 000 person-years in higher and non-consumers, respective­ly).

This is an observatio­nal study, so it can’t establish cause, nor can the researcher­s rule out the possibilit­y that other unknown (confoundin­g) factors might have affected their results.

Neverthele­ss, this was a large study that assessed individual­s’ artificial sweetener intake using precise, high-quality dietary data, and the findings are in line with other studies linking exposure to artificial sweeteners with several markers of poor health.

As such, the researcher­s say their results suggest no benefit from substituti­ng artificial sweeteners for added sugar on CVD outcomes.

 ?? ?? HEART health may be affected by artificial sweeteners. | Pexels
HEART health may be affected by artificial sweeteners. | Pexels

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