Chattanooga Times Free Press

Study details sugar industry attempt to influence science

- BY CANDICE CHOI

NEW YORK — The sugar industry began funding research that cast doubt on sugar’s role in heart disease — in part by pointing the finger at fat — as early as the 1960s, according to an analysis of newly uncovered documents.

The analysis published Monday is based on correspond­ence between a sugar trade group and researcher­s at Harvard University, and is the latest example showing how food and beverage makers attempt to shape public understand­ing of nutrition.

In 1964, the group now known as the Sugar Associatio­n internally discussed a campaign to address “negative attitudes toward sugar” after studies began emerging linking sugar with heart disease, according to documents dug up from public archives. The following year the group approved “Project 226,” which entailed paying Harvard researcher­s today’s equivalent of $48,900 for an article reviewing the scientific literature, supplying materials they wanted reviewed, and receiving drafts of the article.

The resulting article published in 1967 concluded there was “no doubt” reducing cholestero­l and saturated fat was the only dietary interventi­on needed to prevent heart disease. The researcher­s overstated the consistenc­y of the literature on fat and cholestero­l, while downplayin­g studies on sugar, according to the analysis.

“Let me assure you this is quite what we had in mind and we look forward to its appearance in print,” wrote an employee of the sugar industry group to one of the authors.

The sugar industry’s funding and role were not disclosed when the article was published by the New England Journal of Medicine. The journal did not begin requesting author disclosure­s until 1984.

In an editorial published Monday that accompanie­d the sugar industry analysis, New York University professor of nutrition Marion Nestle noted that for decades following the study, scientists and health officials focused on reducing saturated fat, not sugar, to prevent heart disease.

While scientists are still working to understand links between diet and heart disease, concern has shifted in recent years to sugars, and away from fat, Nestle said.

A committee that advised the federal government on dietary guidelines said the available evidence shows “no appreciabl­e relationsh­ip” between the dietary cholestero­l and heart disease, although it still recommende­d limiting saturated fats.

The American Heart Associatio­n cites a study published in 2014 in saying too much added sugar can increase risk of heart disease, though the authors of that study say the biological reasons for the link are not completely understood.

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