Now lets pause here
for a minute, because this is quite a sensational claim. The authors have not
examined total sugar intake in their study so they themselves cannot imply that
higher fruit juice intake is associated with higher sugar intake. What about
sugar from the sugar bowl, from jams and preserves, biscuits and cakes and of
course soft drinks? In the absence of data on total sugar intake, the authors
can conclude nothing whatsoever. The authors never mention this fact when they
consider the limitations of the study. Rather, they regret that they were not
able to statistically control for “total energy intake or total calories” (the
same thing by the way). But they were able to control for weight height and
other potentially confounding factors. Why could they not control for energy
intake? To fail to report total energy intake and the fraction of that intake
contributed by total sugar and added sugar is unfathomable in terms of
scientific rigour. It renders this paper utterly useless and it casts a shadow
on the editorial process of the journal where it was published. But it made
great headlines and no doubt the Daily Mail story was carried around the world
to warm the cockles of the beating hearts of the “sugar is toxic” school of
thought.
Now contrast that
paper with one published about the same time by a consortium led by David
Jenkins a Canadian based world leader in the field of diet and health[2].
This group conducted a systematic review and meta analysis of studies, which
have measured actual fructose intake and followed the subjects up for many
years to monitor the development of hypertension. They identified 3,749 scientific
papers with the words “fructose” and “hypertension” in the titles and immediately
scrapped 3,723 because they were animal studies, cell studies, case studies,
reviews rather that actual studies and so on. Of the 26 articles remaining, 25
were omitted because they had inadequate end-points (14), were a
non-prospective (follow-up) cohort (7) or did not disclose total fructose
intake (3). Theses omissions were all based upon strict rules that are
internationally regarded as the “must follow” rules of systematic reviews. That
left them with just three studies. However, these were very big studies, which
involved 223,230 subjects who were perfectly healthy when recruited at
baseline. They were followed up for an average of 11 years and 58,162 went on
to develop clinical hypertension. The
subjects were categorized in to (fifths) quintiles of fructose intake. The
authors found absolutely no evidence that the greater the quantity of fructose
consumed from the lowest to the highest fifth was in any way associated with
hypertension. The statistical models included all known confounding factors.
It should be noted
that all three of the above papers were in the literature for the Australian
group to go and find but apparently, they did not. The “sugar is toxic”
die-hards will remember their study. But the scientific world will remain far
more impressed by the Jenkins systematic review.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.