As you add more
ultraprocessed foods to your diet, your risk of a premature death from any
cause rises, according to a new meta-analysis of research involving more than
240,000 people.
“We looked at the risk of
a person dying from eating more ultraprocessed foods between the ages of 30 and
69, a time when it would be premature to die,” said study coauthor Carlos
Augusto Monteiro, emeritus professor of nutrition and public health in the School
of Public Health at Brazil’s University of São Paulo.
“We found that for each
10% increase in total calories from ultraprocessed foods, the risk of dying
prematurely rose by nearly 3%,” said Monteiro, who coined the term
“ultraprocessed” in 2009 when he developed NOVA, a system of classifying foods
into four groups by their level of processing.
Group one of the NOVA
system is unprocessed or minimally processed foods in their natural state, such
as fruits, vegetables, meat, milk and eggs. Group two includes culinary
ingredients such as salt, herbs and oils. Group three consists of processed
foods that combine groups one and two — canned goods and frozen vegetables are
examples.
Group four includes
ultraprocessed foods. By Monteiro’s definition, ultraprocessed foods contain
little to no whole food. Instead, they are manufactured from “chemically
manipulated cheap ingredients” and often use “synthetic additives to make them
edible, palatable and habit-forming.”
“No reason exists to
believe that humans can fully adapt to these products,” Monteiro cowrote in a
2024 editorial in the journal The BMJ. “The body may react to them as useless
or harmful, so its systems may become impaired or damaged, depending on their
vulnerability and the amount of ultra-processed food consumed.”
But the new study is
misleading and will lead to consumer confusion, said Sarah Gallo, senior vice
president of product policy for the Consumer Brands Association, which
represents the food industry.
“Demonizing convenient,
affordable and shelf ready food and beverage products could limit access to and
cause avoidance of nutrient dense foods,” Gallo said in an email, “resulting in
decreased diet quality, increased risk of food-borne illness and exacerbated
health disparities.
Ultraprocessed foods
include bakery items such as doughnuts, packaged snacks, ready-to-eat meals,
breakfast cereals, frozen meals, and sweetened and diet beverages. Igor
Barilo/iStockphoto/Getty Images
Just a serving a day matters, studies say
This study is not the
first to find an association between negative health outcomes and small
increases in ultraprocessed food.
A February 2024 study
found “strong” evidence that people who ate more ultraprocessed food had a 50%
higher risk of cardiovascular disease-related death and common mental
disorders.
Higher intake of
ultraprocessed foods might also increase the risk of anxiety by up to 53%,
obesity by 55%, sleep disorders by 41%, development of type 2 diabetes by 40%
and the risk of depression or an early death from any cause by 20%.
Researchers in the
February study defined a higher intake as one serving or about 10% more
ultraprocessed foods per day.
A May 2024 study found
that adding just 10% of ultraprocessed food to an otherwise healthy diet may
also increase the risk of cognitive decline and stroke, while 2023 research
determined that including 10% more ultraprocessed foods was linked to a greater
chance of developing cancers of the upper digestive tract.
It’s estimated that as
much as 70% of the US food supply is ultraprocessed.
“Two-thirds of the
calories children consume in the US are ultraprocessed, while about 60% of
adult diets are ultraprocessed,” Fang Fang Zhang, associate professor and chair
of the division of nutrition epidemiology and data science at Tufts University
in Boston, told CNN in an earlier interview. Zhang was not involved in the new
research.
A global estimate of preventable deaths
The latest study,
published Monday in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, took an
additional step by estimating how many deaths might be prevented in eight
countries with low, medium and high consumption of ultraprocessed foods.
“Premature preventable
deaths due to the consumption of UPFs can vary from 4% in countries with lower
UPF consumption to almost 14% in countries with the highest UPF consumption,”
lead study author Eduardo Augusto Fernandes Nilson, a researcher at the Oswaldo
Cruz Foundation in Rio de Janeiro, said in a statement.
However, it’s important to
note that the study was unable to determine if the deaths were “caused by UPF
consumption. The methods of this study simply cannot determine this,” said
nutrition scientist Nerys Astbury, an associate professor of diet and obesity
at the UK’s University of Oxford, in a statement. He was not involved in the
study.
The United States has the
highest level of ultraprocessed food consumption in the world — nearly 55% of
the average American’s diet, according to the study. Researchers estimated
reducing the use of those ultraprocessed foods to zero would have prevented
over 124,000 deaths in the US in 2017.
In countries where
consumption of ultraprocessed foods is low, such as Colombia (15% of the diet)
and Brazil (17.4%), reducing the use to zero would have prevented nearly 3,000
deaths in the former country in 2015 and 25,000 deaths in the latter in 2017,
according to the study.
“The authors set the
theoretical minimal risk level to be 0. This implies a scenario where all UPFs
are eliminated, which is highly unrealistic and nearly impossible in our
current society,” Zhang said in an email. “As a result, the estimated burden of
pre-mature death due to UPFs could be overestimated.”
Stephen Burgess, a
statistician in the MRC Biostatistics Unit at the UK’s University of Cambridge,
said that while the study cannot prove the consumption of ultraprocessed foods
is harmful, “it does provide evidence linking consumption with poorer health
outcomes.”
“It is possible that the
true causal risk factor is not ultraprocessed foods, but a related risk factor
such as better physical fitness — and ultraprocessed foods is simply an
innocent bystander,” said Burgess, who was not involved in the study, in a
statement. “But, when we see these associations replicated across many
countries and cultures, it raises suspicion that ultraprocessed foods may be
more than a bystander.”
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