Food and Behaviour Research

Donate Log In

UK Nutrient Gaps and Impacts on Early Development with Dr Emma Derbyshire and TC Callis - BOOK HERE

Historic US and UK dietary advice on fats 'should not have been introduced'

BMJ-British Medical Journal

high-fat-diet - Credit Pixabay CC0 public domain.jpg

National dietary advice on fat consumption issued to millions of US and UK citizens in 1977 and 1983, to cut coronary heart disease incidence, lacked any solid trial evidence to back it up, and 'should not have been introduced,' concludes new research.

FAB RESEARCH COMMENT:

National Dietary Guidelines introduced in the US in the late 1970s, and then the UK from the early 80s recommended reducing dietary fat intakes, with the stated aim that this would reduce heart disease and associated mortality.

However, these guidelines were not 'evidence-based', according to this systematic review of the randomised controlled clinical trials available at the time - the study design considered to be the 'gold standard' for assessing cause-and-effect relationships.

Just six controlled clinical trials, involving fewer than 2500 men with heart disease, and using various dietary interventions, had found absolutely no evidence to support the hypothesis that either saturated fat intake, or blood cholesterol levels, play any causal role in cardiovascular disease incidence or mortality.

The review concludes that a re-appraisal and revision of national dietary recommendations and guidelines is now long overdue - given that
  1. there never was any good evidence to support 'low-fat' dietary guidelines, and 
  2. since their introduction, rates of diet-related physical health problems have increased dramatically - particularly obesity, type 2 diabetes and related metabolic conditions - which are known to raise risks for cardiovascular disease 
The dietary guidelines led to the 'demonisation' of so-called 'high-fat' foods from the 1980s onwards - including many nutritious whole or minimally processed foods such as meat, eggs, and dairy products (found in all traditional, pre-industrial diets) 

They also contributed to major increases in dietary intakes of both sugar and refined carbohydrates, as well as the highly refined vegetable oils used in margarines and other 'ultra-processed foods'.

Accumulating evidence now indicates that these dietary changes not only helped to drive the 'epidemics' that followed of obesity, Type 2 diabetes and related physical health conditions - but have also payed a key role in increasing vulnerability to mental health disorders.

The brain is 60% fat - and it really does matter what kind. The likely negative consequences of 'low fat' (high-carb, and highly processed) foods and diets for brain health (as well as heart health) were flagged by leading experts from the 1970s onwards, and yet dietary guidelines - then and now - continue to ignore the nutritional needs of the brain.


For details of this research - which is open-access, see:

10 Feb 2015 - ScienceDaily

------------------------------

National dietary advice on fat consumption issued to millions of US and UK citizens in 1977 and 1983, to cut coronary heart disease incidence, lacked any solid trial evidence to back it up, and 'should not have been introduced,' concludes new research, 
published in the online journal Open Heart.

Both sets of dietary guidelines recommended reducing overall dietary fat consumption to 30% of total energy intake, and specifically, saturated fat to 10% of total energy intake. Both acknowledged that the evidence was not conclusive.

In the absence of any analysis of the evidence used to corroborate the dietary recommendations, the researchers carried out a systematic review and meta-analysis of the randomised control trial data that would have been available to the US and UK regulatory committees at the time.

After a comprehensive search of research databases, they found six relevant trials, covering seven different dietary interventions, spanning an average of five years, and involving 2467 men.

All the trials had been published before 1983 and had looked at the relationship between dietary fat, serum cholesterol, and the development of coronary heart disease.

Five out of the six did not consider either the overall or saturated fat recommendations. And all but one focused on secondary rather than primary prevention.

The pooled data revealed a total of 740 deaths from all causes, and 423 from coronary heart disease.

There was no difference in deaths from all causes between the 'treatment' and comparison groups, with 370 deaths in both. And there was no significant difference in deaths from coronary heart disease, with 207 in the 'treatment' groups and 216 in the comparison groups.

The falls in serum cholesterol were significantly greater in the 'treatment' groups, but this did not seem to have any impact on the death rates from all causes or from coronary heart disease, the analysis showed.

The researchers highlight several caveats in the evidence available at the time: no women were included; no trial tested the dietary recommendations; no trial concluded that dietary guidelines should be drawn up.

"It seems incomprehensible that dietary advice was introduced for 220 million Americans and 56 million UK citizens, given the contrary results from a small number of unhealthy men," write the researchers.

They go on to say: "The results of the present meta-analysis support the hypothesis that the available [randomised controlled trials] did not support the introduction of dietary fat recommendations in order to reduce [coronary heart disease] risk or related mortality."

And they conclude: "Dietary advice not merely needs review; it should not have been introduced."

But in a linked editorial, Rahul Bahl, of the Royal Berkshire NHS Foundation Trust, sounds a note of caution.

The most up to date review of the evidence also concluded that the evidence on which current dietary guidance is based was "very limited," but this doesn't mean that the risk factor identified is not a true risk factor, he says.

There is epidemiological and ecological evidence suggesting a link between dietary fat and heart disease, added to which public policies generally don't require randomised controlled trial evidence, he adds.

"There is certainly a strong argument that an overreliance in public health on saturated fat as the main dietary villain for cardiovascular disease has distracted from the risks posed by other nutrients, such as carbohydrates," he writes.

"Yet replacing one caricature with another does not feel like a solution," he insists.