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THE SOFT SCIENCE OF DIETARY FAT

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http://www.second-opinions.co.uk/taubes.html

 

by Gary Taubes

 

Originally published at Science, Vol 291, Issue 5513, 2536-2545 , 30

March 2001

 

Mainstream nutritional science has demonized dietary fat, yet 50 years

and hundreds of millions of dollars of research have failed to prove

that eating a low-fat diet will help you live longer.

 

" They say ,' You really need a high level of proof to change the

recommendations,' which is ironic, because they never had a high level

of proof to set them. "

Walter Willett

 

" In America, we no longer fear God or the communists, we fear fat. "

David Kritchevsky

 

" There comes a point when, if you don't make a decision, the

consequences can be great as well. If you just allow Americans to keep

on consuming 40% of calories from fat, there's an outcome to that as well. "

Basil Rifkind

 

 

 

When the U.S. Surgeon General's Office set off in 1988 to write the

definitive report on the dangers of dietary fat, the scientific task

appeared straightforward. Four years earlier, the National Institutes of

Health (NIH) had begun advising every American old enough to walk to

restrict fat intake, and the president of the American Heart Association

(AHA) had told Time magazine that if everyone went along, " we will have

[atherosclerosis] conquered " by the year 2000. The Surgeon General's

Office itself had just published its 700-page landmark " Report on

Nutrition and Health, " declaring fat the single most unwholesome

component of the American diet.

 

All of this was apparently based on sound science. So the task before

the project officer was merely to gather that science together in one

volume, have it reviewed by a committee of experts, which had been

promptly established, and publish it. The project did not go smoothly,

however. Four project officers came and went over the next decade. " It

consumed project officers, " says Marion Nestle, who helped launch the

project and now runs the nutrition and food studies department at New

York University (NYU). Members of the oversight committee saw drafts of

an early chapter or two, criticized them vigorously, and then saw little

else.

 

Finally, in June 1999, 11 years after the project began, the Surgeon

General's Office circulated a letter, authored by the last of the

project officers, explaining that the report would be killed. There was

no other public announcement and no press release. The letter explained

that the relevant administrators " did not anticipate fully the magnitude

of the additional external expertise and staff resources that would be

needed. " In other words, says Nestle, the subject matter " was too

complicated. " Bill Harlan, a member of the oversight committee and

associate director of the Office of Disease Prevention at NIH, says " the

report was initiated with a preconceived opinion of the conclusions, "

but the science behind those opinions was not holding up. " Clearly the

thoughts of yesterday were not going to serve us very well. "

 

During the past 30 years, the concept of eating healthy in America has

become synonymous with avoiding dietary fat. The creation and marketing

of reduced-fat food products has become big business; over 15,000 have

appeared on supermarket shelves. Indeed, an entire research industry has

arisen to create palatable nonfat fat substitutes, and the food industry

now spends billions of dollars yearly selling the

less-fat-is-good-health message. The government weighs in as well, with

the U.S. Department of Agriculture's (USDA's) booklet on dietary

guidelines, published every 5 years, and its ubiquitous Food Guide

Pyramid, which recommends that fats and oils be eaten " sparingly. " The

low-fat gospel spreads farther by a kind of societal osmosis,

continuously reinforced by physicians, nutritionists, journalists,

health organizations, and consumer advocacy groups such as the Center

for Science in the Public Interest, which refers to fat as this " greasy

killer. " " In America, we no longer fear God or the communists, but we

fear fat, " says David Kritchevsky of the Wistar Institute in

Philadelphia, who in 1958 wrote the first textbook on cholesterol.

 

As the Surgeon General's Office discovered, however, the science of

dietary fat is not nearly as simple as it once appeared. The

proposition, now 50 years old, that dietary fat is a bane to health is

based chiefly on the fact that fat, specifically the hard, saturated fat

found primarily in meat and dairy products, elevates blood cholesterol

levels. This in turn raises the likelihood that cholesterol will clog

arteries, a condition known as atherosclerosis, which then increases

risk of coronary artery disease, heart attack, and untimely death. By

the 1970s, each individual step of this chain from fat to cholesterol to

heart disease had been demonstrated beyond reasonable doubt, but the

veracity of the chain as a whole has never been proven. In other words,

despite decades of research, it is still a debatable proposition whether

the consumption of saturated fats above recommended levels (step one in

the chain) by anyone who's not already at high risk of heart disease

will increase the likelihood of untimely death (outcome three). Nor have

hundreds of millions of dollars in trials managed to generate compelling

evidence that healthy individuals can extend their lives by more than a

few weeks, if that, by eating less fat (see sidebar on p. 2538). To put

it simply, the data remain ambiguous as to whether low-fat diets will

benefit healthy Americans. Worse, the ubiquitous admonishments to reduce

total fat intake have encouraged a shift to high-carbohydrate diets,

which may be no better--and may even be worse--than high-fat diets.

 

Since the early 1970s, for instance, Americans' average fat intake has

dropped from over 40% of total calories to 34%; average serum

cholesterol levels have dropped as well. But no compelling evidence

suggests that these decreases have improved health. Although heart

disease death rates have dropped--and public health officials insist

low-fat diets are partly responsible--the incidence of heart disease

does not seem to be declining, as would be expected if lower fat diets

made a difference. This was the conclusion, for instance, of a 10-year

study of heart disease mortality published in The New England Journal of

Medicine in 1998, which suggested that death rates are declining largely

because doctors are treating the disease more successfully. AHA

statistics agree: Between 1979 and 1996, the number of medical

procedures for heart disease increased from 1.2 million to 5.4 million a

year. " I don't consider that this disease category has disappeared or

anything close to it, " says one AHA statistician.

 

Meanwhile, obesity in America, which remained constant from the early

1960s through 1980, has surged upward since then--from 14% of the

population to over 22%. Diabetes has increased apace. Both obesity and

diabetes increase heart disease risk, which could explain why heart

disease incidence is not decreasing. That this obesity epidemic occurred

just as the government began bombarding Americans with the low-fat

message suggests the possibility, however distant, that low-fat diets

might have unintended consequences--among them, weight gain. " Most of us

would have predicted that if we can get the population to change its fat

intake, with its dense calories, we would see a reduction in weight, "

admits Harlan. " Instead, we see the exact opposite. "

 

In the face of this uncertainty, skeptics and apostates have come along

repeatedly, only to see their work almost religiously ignored as the

mainstream medical community sought consensus on the evils of dietary

fat. For 20 years, for instance, the Harvard School of Public Health has

run the Nurses' Health Study and its two sequelae--the Health

Professionals Follow-Up Study and the Nurses' Health Study

II--accumulating over a decade of data on the diet and health of almost

300,000 Americans. The results suggest that total fat consumed has no

relation to heart disease risk; that monounsaturated fats like olive oil

lower risk; and that saturated fats are little worse, if at all, than

the pasta and other carbohydrates that the Food Guide Pyramid suggests

be eaten copiously. (The studies also suggest that trans fatty acids are

unhealthful. These are the fats in margarine, for instance, and are what

many Americans started eating when they were told that the saturated

fats in butter might kill them.) Harvard epidemiologist Walter Willett,

spokesperson for the Nurses' Health Study, points out that NIH has spent

over $100 million on the three studies and yet not one government agency

has changed its primary guidelines to fit these particular data.

" Scandalous, " says Willett. " They say, 'You really need a high level of

proof to change the recommendations,' which is ironic, because they

never had a high level of proof to set them. "

 

Indeed, the history of the national conviction that dietary fat is

deadly, and its evolution from hypothesis to dogma, is one in which

politicians, bureaucrats, the media, and the public have played as large

a role as the scientists and the science. It's a story of what can

happen when the demands of public health policy--and the demands of the

public for simple advice--run up against the confusing ambiguity of real

science.

 

Fear of fat

During the first half of the 20th century, nutritionists were more

concerned about malnutrition than about the sins of dietary excess.

After World War II, however, a coronary heart disease epidemic seemed to

sweep the country (see sidebar on p. 2540). " Middle-aged men, seemingly

healthy, were dropping dead, " wrote biochemist Ancel Keys of the

University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, who was among the first to suggest

that dietary fats might be the cause. By 1952, Keys was arguing that

Americans should reduce their fat intake to less than 30% of total

calories, although he simultaneously recognized that " direct evidence on

the effect of the diet on human arteriosclerosis is very little and

likely to remain so for some time. " In the famous and very controversial

Seven Countries Study, for instance, Keys and his colleagues reported

that the amount of fat consumed seemed to be the salient difference

between populations such as those in Japan and Crete that had little

heart disease and those, as in Finland, that were plagued by it. In

1961, the Framingham Heart Study linked cholesterol levels to heart

disease, Keys made the cover of Time magazine, and the AHA, under his

influence, began advocating low-fat diets as a palliative for men with

high cholesterol levels. Keys had also become one of the first Americans

to consciously adopt a heart-healthy diet: He and his wife, Time

reported, " do not eat 'carving meat'--steaks, chops, roasts--more than

three times a week. "

 

Nonetheless, by 1969 the state of the science could still be summarized

by a single sentence from a report of the Diet-Heart Review Panel of the

National Heart Institute (now the National Heart, Lung, and Blood

Institute, or NHLBI): " It is not known whether dietary manipulation has

any effect whatsoever on coronary heart disease. " The chair of the panel

was E. H. " Pete " Ahrens, whose laboratory at Rockefeller University in

New York City did much of the seminal research on fat and cholesterol

metabolism.

 

Whereas proponents of low-fat diets were concerned primarily about the

effects of dietary fat on cholesterol levels and heart disease, Ahrens

and his panel--10 experts in clinical medicine, epidemiology,

biostatistics, human nutrition, and metabolism--were equally concerned

that eating less fat could have profound effects throughout the body,

many of which could be harmful. The brain, for instance, is 70% fat,

which chiefly serves to insulate neurons. Fat is also the primary

component of cell membranes. Changing the proportion of saturated to

unsaturated fats in the diet changes the fat composition in these

membranes. This could conceivably change the membrane permeability,

which controls the transport of everything from glucose, signaling

proteins, and hormones to bacteria, viruses, and tumor-causing agents

into and out of the cell. The relative saturation of fats in the diet

could also influence cellular aging as well as the clotting ability of

blood cells.

 

Whether the potential benefits of low-fat diets would exceed the

potential risks could be settled by testing whether low-fat diets

actually prolong life, but such a test would have to be enormous. The

effect of diet on cholesterol levels is subtle for most

individuals--especially those living in the real world rather than the

metabolic wards of nutrition researchers--and the effect of cholesterol

levels on heart disease is also subtle. As a result, tens of thousands

of individuals would have to switch to low-fat diets and their

subsequent health compared to that of equal numbers who continued eating

fat to alleged excess. And all these people would have to be followed

for years until enough deaths accumulated to provide statistically

significant results. Ahrens and his colleagues were pessimistic about

whether such a massive and expensive trial could ever be done. In 1971,

an NIH task force estimated such a trial would cost $1 billion,

considerably more than NIH was willing to spend. Instead, NIH

administrators opted for a handful of smaller studies, two of which

alone would cost $255 million. Perhaps more important, these studies

would take a decade. Neither the public, the press, nor the U.S.

Congress was willing to wait that long.

 

Science by committee

Like the flourishing American affinity for alternative medicine, an

antifat movement evolved independently of science in the 1960s. It was

fed by distrust of the establishment--in this case, both the medical

establishment and the food industry--and by counterculture attacks on

excessive consumption, whether manifested in gas-guzzling cars or the

classic American cuisine of bacon and eggs and marbled steaks. And while

the data on fat and health remained ambiguous and the scientific

community polarized, the deadlock was broken not by any new science, but

by politicians. It was Senator George McGovern's bipartisan,

nonlegislative Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs--and, to be

precise, a handful of McGovern's staff members--that almost

single-handedly changed nutritional policy in this country and initiated

the process of turning the dietary fat hypothesis into dogma.

 

McGovern's committee was founded in 1968 with a mandate to eradicate

malnutrition in America, and it instituted a series of landmark federal

food assistance programs. As the malnutrition work began to peter out in

the mid-1970s, however, the committee didn't disband. Rather, its

general counsel, Marshall Matz, and staff director, Alan Stone, both

young lawyers, decided that the committee would address " overnutrition, "

the dietary excesses of Americans. It was a " casual endeavor, " says

Matz. " We really were totally naïve, a bunch of kids, who just thought,

'Hell, we should say something on this subject before we go out of

business.' " McGovern and his fellow senators--all middle-aged men

worried about their girth and their health--signed on; McGovern and his

wife had both gone through diet-guru Nathan Pritikin's very low fat diet

and exercise program. McGovern quit the program early, but Pritikin

remained a major influence on his thinking.

 

McGovern's committee listened to 2 days of testimony on diet and disease

in July 1976. Then resident wordsmith Nick Mottern, a former labor

reporter for The Providence Journal, was assigned the task of

researching and writing the first " Dietary Goals for the United States. "

Mottern, who had no scientific background and no experience writing

about science, nutrition, or health, believed his Dietary Goals would

launch a " revolution in diet and agriculture in this country. " He

avoided the scientific and medical controversy by relying almost

exclusively on Harvard School of Public Health nutritionist Mark Hegsted

for input on dietary fat. Hegsted had studied fat and cholesterol

metabolism in the early 1960s, and he believed unconditionally in the

benefits of restricting fat intake, although he says he was aware that

his was an extreme opinion. With Hegsted as his muse, Mottern saw

dietary fat as the nutritional equivalent of cigarettes, and the food

industry as akin to the tobacco industry in its willingness to suppress

scientific truth in the interests of profits. To Mottern, those

scientists who spoke out against fat were those willing to take on the

industry. " It took a certain amount of guts, " he says, " to speak about

this because of the financial interests involved. "

 

Mottern's report suggested that Americans cut their total fat intake to

30% of the calories they consume and saturated fat intake to 10%, in

accord with AHA recommendations for men at high risk of heart disease.

The report acknowledged the existence of controversy but insisted

Americans had nothing to lose by following its advice. " The question to

be asked is not why should we change our diet but why not? " wrote

Hegsted in the introduction. " There are [no risks] that can be

identified and important benefits can be expected. " This was an

optimistic but still debatable position, and when Dietary Goals was

released in January 1977, " all hell broke loose, " recalls Hegsted.

" Practically nobody was in favor of the McGovern recommendations. Damn

few people. "

 

McGovern responded with three follow-up hearings, which aptly

foreshadowed the next 7 years of controversy. Among those testifying,

for instance, was NHLBI director Robert Levy, who explained that no one

knew if eating less fat or lowering blood cholesterol levels would

prevent heart attacks, which was why NHLBI was spending $300 million to

study the question. Levy's position was awkward, he recalls, because

" the good senators came out with the guidelines and then called us in to

get advice. " He was joined by prominent scientists, including Ahrens,

who testified that advising Americans to eat less fat on the strength of

such marginal evidence was equivalent to conducting a nutritional

experiment with the American public as subjects. Even the American

Medical Association protested, suggesting that the diet proposed by the

guidelines raised the " potential for harmful effects. " But as these

scientists testified, so did representatives from the dairy, egg, and

cattle industries, who also vigorously opposed the guidelines for

obvious reasons. This juxtaposition served to taint the scientific

criticisms: Any scientists arguing against the committee's guidelines

appeared to be either hopelessly behind the paradigm, which was

Hegsted's view, or industry apologists, which was Mottern's, if not both.

 

Although the committee published a revised edition of the Dietary Goals

later in the year, the thrust of the recommendations remained unchanged.

It did give in to industry pressure by softening the suggestion that

Americans eat less meat. Mottern says he considered even that a

" disservice to the public, " refused to do the revisions, and quit the

committee. (Mottern became a vegetarian while writing the Dietary Goals

and now runs a food co-op in Peekskill, New York.)

 

The guidelines might have then died a quiet death when McGovern's

committee came to an end in late 1977 if two federal agencies had not

felt it imperative to respond. Although they took contradictory points

of view, one message--with media assistance--won out.

 

The first was the USDA, where consumer-activist Carol Tucker Foreman had

recently been appointed an assistant secretary. Foreman believed it was

incumbent on USDA to turn McGovern's recommendations into official

policy, and, like Mottern, she was not deterred by the existence of

scientific controversy. " Tell us what you know and tell us it's not the

final answer, " she would tell scientists. " I have to eat and feed my

children three times a day, and I want you to tell me what your best

sense of the data is right now. "

 

Of course, given the controversy, the " best sense of the data " would

depend on which scientists were asked. The Food and Nutrition Board of

the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), which decides the Recommended

Dietary Allowances, would have been a natural choice, but NAS president

Philip Handler, an expert on metabolism, had told Foreman that Mottern's

Dietary Goals were " nonsense. " Foreman then turned to McGovern's

staffers for advice and they recommended she hire Hegsted, which she

did. Hegsted, in turn, relied on a state-of-the-science report published

by an expert but very divergent committee of the American Society for

Clinical Nutrition. " They were nowhere near unanimous on anything, " says

Hegsted, " but the majority supported something like the McGovern

committee report. "

 

The resulting document became the first edition of " Using the Dietary

Guidelines for Americans. " Although it acknowledged the existence of

controversy and suggested that a single dietary recommendation might not

suit an entire diverse population, the advice to avoid fat and saturated

fat was, indeed, virtually identical to McGovern's Dietary Goals.

 

Three months later, the NAS Food and Nutrition Board released its own

guidelines: " Toward Healthful Diets. " The board, consisting of a dozen

nutrition experts, concluded that the only reliable advice for healthy

Americans was to watch their weight; everything else, dietary fat

included, would take care of itself. The advice was not taken kindly,

however, at least not by the media. The first reports-- " rather

incredulously, " said Handler at the time--criticized the NAS advice for

conflicting with the USDA's and McGovern's and thus somehow being

irresponsible. Follow-up reports suggested that the board members, in

the words of Jane Brody, who covered the story for The New York Times,

were " all in the pocket of the industries being hurt. " To be precise,

the board chair and one of its members consulted for food industries,

and funding for the board itself came from industry donations. These

industry connections were leaked to the press from the USDA.

 

Hegsted now defends the NAS board, although he didn't at the time, and

calls this kind of conflict of interest " a hell of an issue. " " Everybody

used to complain that industry didn't do anything on nutrition, " he told

Science, " yet anybody who got involved was blackballed because their

positions were presumably influenced by the industry. " (In 1981, Hegsted

returned to Harvard, where his research was funded by Frito-Lay.) The

press had mixed feelings, claiming that the connections " soiled " the

academy's reputation " for tendering careful scientific advice " (The

Washington Post), demonstrated that the board's " objectivity and

aptitude are in doubt " (The New York Times), or represented in the

board's guidelines a " blow against the food faddists who hold the public

in thrall " (Science). In any case, the NAS board had been publicly

discredited. Hegsted's Dietary Guidelines for Americans became the

official U.S. policy on dietary fat: Eat less fat. Live longer.

 

Creating " consensus "

Once politicians, the press, and the public had decided dietary fat

policy, the science was left to catch up. In the early 1970s, when NIH

opted to forgo a $1 billion trial that might be definitive and instead

fund a half-dozen studies at one-third the cost, everyone hoped these

smaller trials would be sufficiently persuasive to conclude that low-fat

diets prolong lives. The results were published between 1980 and 1984.

Four of these trials --comparing heart disease rates and diet within

Honolulu, Puerto Rico, Chicago, and Framingham--showed no evidence that

men who ate less fat lived longer or had fewer heart attacks. A fifth

trial, the Multiple Risk Factor Intervention Trial (MRFIT), cost $115

million and tried to amplify the subtle influences of diet on health by

persuading subjects to avoid fat while simultaneously quitting smoking

and taking medication for high blood pressure. That trial suggested, if

anything, that eating less fat might shorten life. In each study,

however, the investigators concluded that methodological flaws had led

to the negative results. They did not, at least publicly, consider their

results reason to lessen their belief in the evils of fat.

 

The sixth study was the $140 million Lipid Research Clinics (LRC)

Coronary Primary Prevention Trial, led by NHLBI administrator Basil

Rifkind and biochemist Daniel Steinberg of the University of California,

San Diego. The LRC trial was a drug trial, not a diet trial, but the

NHLBI heralded its outcome as the end of the dietary fat debate. In

January 1984, LRC investigators reported that a medication called

cholestyramine reduced cholesterol levels in men with abnormally high

cholesterol levels and modestly reduced heart disease rates in the

process. (The probability of suffering a heart attack during the

seven-plus years of the study was reduced from 8.6% in the placebo group

to 7.0%; the probability of dying from a heart attack dropped from 2.0%

to 1.6%.) The investigators then concluded, without benefit of dietary

data, that cholestyramine's benefits could be extended to diet as well.

And although the trial tested only middle-aged men with cholesterol

levels higher than those of 95% of the population, they concluded that

those benefits " could and should be extended to other age groups and

women and ... other more modest elevations of cholesterol levels. "

 

Why go so far? Rifkind says their logic was simple: For 20 years, he and

his colleagues had argued that lowering cholesterol levels prevented

heart attacks. They had spent enormous sums trying to prove it. They

felt they could never actually demonstrate that low-fat diets prolonged

lives--that would be too expensive, and MRFIT had failed--but now they

had established a fundamental link in the causal chain, from lower

cholesterol levels to cardiovascular health. With that, they could take

the leap of faith from cholesterol-lowering drugs and health to

cholesterol-lowering diet and health. And after all their effort, they

were eager--not to mention urged by Congress--to render helpful advice.

" There comes a point when, if you don't make a decision, the

consequences can be great as well, " says Rifkind. " If you just allow

Americans to keep on consuming 40% of calories from fat, there's an

outcome to that as well. "

 

With the LRC results in press, the NHLBI launched what Levy called " a

massive public health campaign. " The media obligingly went along. Time,

for instance, reported the LRC findings under the headline " Sorry, It's

True. Cholesterol really is a killer. " The article about a drug trial

began: " No whole milk. No butter. No fatty meats ... " Time followed up 3

months later with a cover story: " And Cholesterol and Now the Bad News.

.... " The cover photo was a frowning face: a breakfast plate with two

fried eggs as the eyes and a bacon strip for the mouth. Rifkind was

quoted saying that their results " strongly indicate that the more you

lower cholesterol and fat in your diet, the more you reduce your risk of

heart disease, " a statement that still lacked direct scientific support.

 

The following December, NIH effectively ended the debate with a

" Consensus Conference. " The idea of such a conference is that an expert

panel, ideally unbiased, listens to 2 days of testimony and arrives at a

conclusion with which everyone agrees. In this case, Rifkind chaired the

planning committee, which chose his LRC co-investigator Steinberg to

lead the expert panel. The 20 speakers did include a handful of skeptics

--including Ahrens, for instance, and cardiologist Michael Oliver of

Imperial College in London--who argued that it was unscientific to

equate the effects of a drug with the effects of a diet. Steinberg's

panel members, however, as Oliver later complained in The Lancet, " were

selected to include only experts who would, predictably, say that all

levels of blood cholesterol in the United States are too high and should

be lowered. And, of course, this is exactly what was said. " Indeed, the

conference report, written by Steinberg and his panel, revealed no

evidence of discord. There was " no doubt, " it concluded, that low-fat

diets " will afford significant protection against coronary heart

disease " to every American over 2 years old. The Consensus Conference

officially gave the appearance of unanimity where none existed. After

all, if there had been a true consensus, as Steinberg himself told

Science, " you wouldn't have had to have a consensus conference. "

 

The test of time

To the outside observer, the challenge in making sense of any such

long-running scientific controversy is to establish whether the skeptics

are simply on the wrong side of the new paradigm, or whether their

skepticism is well founded. In other words, is the science at issue

based on sound scientific thinking and unambiguous data, or is it what

Sir Francis Bacon, for instance, would have called " wishful science, "

based on fancies, opinions, and the exclusion of contrary evidence?

Bacon offered one viable suggestion for differentiating the two: the

test of time. Good science is rooted in reality, so it grows and

develops and the evidence gets increasingly more compelling, whereas

wishful science flourishes most under its first authors before " going

downhill. "

 

Such is the case, for instance, with the proposition that dietary fat

causes cancer, which was an integral part of dietary fat anxiety in the

late 1970s. By 1982, the evidence supporting this idea was thought to be

so undeniable that a landmark NAS report on nutrition and cancer equated

those researchers who remained skeptical with " certain interested

parties [who] formerly argued that the association between lung cancer

and smoking was not causational. " Fifteen years and hundreds of millions

of research dollars later, a similarly massive expert report by the

World Cancer Research Fund and the American Institute for Cancer

Research could find neither " convincing " nor even " probable " reason to

believe that dietary fat caused cancer.

 

The hypothesis that low-fat diets are the requisite route to weight loss

has taken a similar downward path. This was the ultimate fallback

position in all low-fat recommendations: Fat has nine calories per gram

compared to four calories for carbohydrates and protein, and so cutting

fat from the diet surely would cut pounds. " This is held almost to be a

religious truth, " says Harvard's Willett. Considerable data, however,

now suggest otherwise. The results of well-controlled clinical trials

are consistent: People on low-fat diets initially lose a couple of

kilograms, as they would on any diet, and then the weight tends to

return. After 1 to 2 years, little has been achieved. Consider, for

instance, the 50,000 women enrolled in the ongoing $100 million Women's

Health Initiative (WHI). Half of these women have been extensively

counseled to consume only 20% of their calories from fat. After 3 years

on this near-draconian regime, say WHI sources, the women had lost, on

average, a kilogram each.

 

The link between dietary fat and heart disease is more complicated,

because the hypothesis has diverged into two distinct propositions:

first, that lowering cholesterol prevents heart disease; second, that

eating less fat not only lowers cholesterol and prevents heart disease

but prolongs life. Since 1984, the evidence that cholesterol-lowering

drugs are beneficial--proposition number one--has indeed blossomed, at

least for those at high risk of heart attack. These drugs reduce serum

cholesterol levels dramatically, and they prevent heart attacks, perhaps

by other means as well. Their market has now reached $4 billion a year

in the United States alone, and every new trial seems to confirm their

benefits.

 

The evidence supporting the second proposition, that eating less fat

makes for a healthier and longer life, however, has remained stubbornly

ambiguous. If anything, it has only become less compelling over time.

Indeed, since Ancel Keys started advocating low-fat diets almost 50

years ago, the science of fat and cholesterol has evolved from a simple

story into a very complicated one. The catch has been that few involved

in this business were prepared to deal with a complicated story.

Researchers initially preferred to believe it was simple--that a single

unwholesome nutrient, in effect, could be isolated from the diverse

richness of human diets; public health administrators required a simple

story to give to Congress and the public; and the press needed a simple

story--at least on any particular day--to give to editors and readers in

30 column inches. But as contrarian data continued to accumulate, the

complications became increasingly more difficult to ignore or exclude,

and the press began waffling or adding caveats. The scientists then got

the blame for not sticking to the original simple story, which had,

regrettably, never existed.

 

More fats, fewer answers

The original simple story in the 1950s was that high cholesterol levels

increase heart disease risk. The seminal Framingham Heart Study, for

instance, which revealed the association between cholesterol and heart

disease, originally measured only total serum cholesterol. But

cholesterol shuttles through the blood in an array of packages.

Low-density lipoprotein particles (LDL, the " bad " cholesterol) deliver

fat and cholesterol from the liver to tissues that need it, including

the arterial cells, where it can lead to atherosclerotic plaques.

High-density lipoproteins (HDLs, the " good " cholesterol) return

cholesterol to the liver. The higher the HDL, the lower the heart

disease risk. Then there are triglycerides, which contain fatty acids,

and very low density lipoproteins (VLDLs), which transport triglycerides.

 

All of these particles have some effect on heart disease risk, while the

fats, carbohydrates, and protein in the diet have varying effects on all

these particles. The 1950s story was that saturated fats increase total

cholesterol, polyunsaturated fats decrease it, and monounsaturated fats

are neutral. By the late 1970s--when researchers accepted the benefits

of HDL--they realized that monounsaturated fats are not neutral. Rather,

they raise HDL, at least compared to carbohydrates, and lower LDL. This

makes them an ideal nutrient as far as cholesterol goes. Furthermore,

saturated fats cannot be quite so evil because, while they elevate LDL,

which is bad, they also elevate HDL, which is good. And some saturated

fats--stearic acid, in particular, the fat in chocolate--are at worst

neutral. Stearic acid raises HDL levels but does little or nothing to

LDL. And then there are trans fatty acids, which raise LDL, just like

saturated fat, but also lower HDL. Today, none of this is controversial,

although it has yet to be reflected in any Food Guide Pyramid.

 

To understand where this complexity can lead in a simple example,

consider a steak--to be precise, a porterhouse, select cut, with a

half-centimeter layer of fat, the nutritional constituents of which can

be found in the Nutrient Database for Standard Reference at the USDA Web

site. After broiling, this porterhouse reduces to a serving of almost

equal parts fat and protein. Fifty-one percent of the fat is

monounsaturated, of which virtually all (90%) is oleic acid, the same

healthy fat that's in olive oil. Saturated fat constitutes 45% of the

total fat, but a third of that is stearic acid, which is, at the very

least, harmless. The remaining 4% of the fat is polyunsaturated, which

also improves cholesterol levels. In sum, well over half--and perhaps as

much as 70%--of the fat content of a porterhouse will improve

cholesterol levels compared to what they would be if bread, potatoes, or

pasta were consumed instead. The remaining 30% will raise LDL but will

also raise HDL. All of this suggests that eating a porterhouse steak

rather than carbohydrates might actually improve heart disease risk,

although no nutritional authority who hasn't written a high-fat diet

book will say this publicly.

 

As for the scientific studies, in the years since the 1984 consensus

conference, the one thing they have not done is pile up evidence in

support of the low-fat-for-all approach to the public good. If anything,

they have added weight to Ahrens's fears that there may be a downside to

populationwide low-fat recommendations. In 1986, for instance, just 1

year after NIH launched the National Cholesterol Education Program, also

advising low-fat diets for everyone over 2 years old, epidemiologist

David Jacobs of the University of Minnesota, Twin Cities, visited Japan.

There he learned that Japanese physicians were advising patients to

raise their cholesterol levels, because low cholesterol levels were

linked to hemorrhagic stroke. At the time, Japanese men were dying from

stroke almost as frequently as American men were succumbing to heart

disease. Back in Minnesota, Jacobs looked for this

low-cholesterol-stroke relationship in the MRFIT data and found it

there, too. And the relationship transcended stroke: Men with very low

cholesterol levels seemed prone to premature death; below 160 milligrams

per deciliter (mg/dl), the lower the cholesterol level, the shorter the

life.

 

Jacobs reported his results to NHLBI, which in 1990 hosted a conference

to discuss the issue, bringing together researchers from 19 studies

around the world. The data were consistent: When investigators tracked

all deaths, instead of just heart disease deaths, the cholesterol curves

were U-shaped for men and flat for women. In other words, men with

cholesterol levels above 240 mg/dl tended to die prematurely from heart

disease. But below 160 mg/dl, the men tended to die prematurely from

cancer, respiratory and digestive diseases, and trauma. As for women, if

anything, the higher their cholesterol, the longer they lived (see graph

on p. 2540).

 

These mortality data can be interpreted in two ways. One, preferred by

low-fat advocates, is that they cannot be meaningful. Rifkind, for

instance, told Science that the excess deaths at low cholesterol levels

must be due to preexisting conditions. In other words, chronic illness

leads to low cholesterol levels, not vice versa. He pointed to the 1990

conference report as the definitive document on the issue and as support

for his argument, although the report states unequivocally that this

interpretation is not supported by the data.

 

The other interpretation is that what a low-fat diet does to serum

cholesterol levels, and what that in turn does to arteries, may be only

one component of the diet's effect on health. In other words, while

low-fat diets might help prevent heart disease, they might also raise

susceptibility to other conditions. This is what always worried Ahrens.

It's also one reason why the American College of Physicians, for

instance, now suggests that cholesterol reduction is certainly

worthwhile for those at high, short-term risk of dying of coronary heart

disease but of " much smaller or ... uncertain " benefit for everyone else.

 

This interpretation--that the connection between diet and health far

transcends cholesterol--is also supported by the single most dramatic

diet-heart trial ever conducted: the Lyon Diet Heart Study, led by

Michel de Lorgeril of the French National Institute of Health and

Medical Research (INSERM) and published in Circulation in February 1999.

The investigators randomized 605 heart attack survivors, all on

cholesterol-lowering drugs, into two groups. They counseled one to eat

an AHA " prudent diet, " very similar to that recommended for all

Americans. They counseled the other to eat a Mediterranean-type diet,

with more bread, cereals, legumes, beans, vegetables, fruits, and fish

and less meat. Total fat and types of fat differed markedly in the two

diets, but the HDL, LDL, and total cholesterol levels in the two groups

remained virtually identical. Nonetheless, over 4 years of follow-up,

the Mediterranean-diet group had only 14 cardiac deaths and nonfatal

heart attacks compared to 44 for the " Western-type " diet group. The

likely explanation, wrote de Lorgeril and his colleagues, is that the

" protective effects [of the Mediterranean diet] were not related to

serum concentrations of total, LDL or HDL cholesterol. "

 

Many researchers find the Lyon data so perplexing that they're left

questioning the methodology of the trial. Nonetheless, says NIH's

Harlan, the data " are very provocative. They do bring up the issue of

whether if we look only at cholesterol levels we aren't going to miss

something very important. " De Lorgeril believes the diet's protective

effect comes primarily from omega-3 fatty acids, found in seed oils,

meat, cereals, green leafy vegetables, and fish, and from antioxidant

compounds, including vitamins, trace elements, and flavonoids. He told

Science that most researchers and journalists in the field are prisoners

of the " cholesterol paradigm. " Although dietary fat and serum

cholesterol " are obviously connected, " he says, " the connection is not a

robust one " when it comes to heart disease.

 

Dietary trade-offs

One inescapable reality is that death is a trade-off, and so is diet.

" You have to eat something, " says epidemiologist Hugh Tunstall Pedoe of

the University of Dundee, U.K., spokesperson for the 21-nation

Monitoring Cardiovascular Disease Project run by the World Health

Organization. " If you eat more of one thing, you eat a lot less of

something else. So for every theory saying this disease is caused by an

excess in x, you can produce an alternative theory saying it's a

deficiency in y. " It would be simple if, say, saturated fats could be

cut from the diet and the calories with it, but that's not the case.

Despite all expectations to the contrary, people tend to consume the

same number of calories despite whatever diet they try. If they eat less

total fat, for instance, they will eat more carbohydrates and probably

less protein, because most protein comes in foods like meat that also

have considerable amounts of fat.

 

This plus-minus problem suggests a different interpretation for

virtually every diet study ever done, including, for instance, the kind

of metabolic-ward studies that originally demonstrated the ability of

saturated fats to raise cholesterol. If researchers reduce the amount of

saturated fat in the test diet, they have to make up the calories

elsewhere. Do they add polyunsaturated fats, for instance, or add

carbohydrates? A single carbohydrate or mixed carbohydrates? Do they add

green leafy vegetables, or do they add pasta? And so it goes. " The sky's

the limit, " says nutritionist Alice Lichtenstein of Tufts University in

Boston. " There are a million perturbations. "

 

These trade-offs also confound the kind of epidemiological studies that

demonized saturated fat from the 1950s onward. In particular,

individuals who eat copious amounts of meat and dairy products, and

plenty of saturated fats in the process, tend not to eat copious amounts

of vegetables and fruits. The same holds for entire populations. The

eastern Finns, for instance, whose lofty heart disease rates convinced

Ancel Keys and a generation of researchers of the evils of fat, live

within 500 kilometers of the Arctic Circle and rarely see fresh produce

or a green vegetable. The Scots, infamous for eating perhaps the least

wholesome diet in the developed world, are in a similar fix. Basil

Rifkind recalls being laughed at once on this point when he lectured to

Scottish physicians on healthy diets: " One said, 'You talk about

increasing fruits and vegetable consumption, but in the area I work in

there's not a single grocery store.' " In both cases, researchers joke

that the only green leafy vegetable these populations consume regularly

is tobacco. As for the purported benefits of the widely hailed

Mediterranean diet, is it the fish, the olive oil, or the fresh

vegetables? After all, says Harvard epidemiologist Dimitrios

Trichopoulos, a native of Greece, the olive oil is used either to cook

vegetables or as dressing over salads. " The quantity of vegetables

consumed is almost a pound [half a kilogram] a day, " he says, " and you

cannot eat it without olive oil. And we eat a lot of legumes, and we

cannot eat legumes without olive oil. "

 

Indeed, recent data on heart disease trends in Europe suggest that a

likely explanation for the differences between countries and over time

is the availability of fresh produce year-round rather than differences

in fat intake. While the press often plays up the French paradox--the

French have little heart disease despite seemingly high saturated fat

consumption--the real paradox is throughout Southern Europe, where heart

disease death rates have steadily dropped while animal fat consumption

has steadily risen, says University of Cambridge epidemiologist John

Powles, who studies national disease trends. The same trend appears in

Japan. " We have this idea that it's the Arcadian past, the life in the

village, the utopia that we've lost, " Powles says; " that the really

protective Mediterranean diet is what people ate in the 1950s. " But that

notion isn't supported by the data: As these Mediterranean nations

became more affluent, says Powles, they began to eat proportionally more

meat and with it more animal fat. Their heart disease rates, however,

continued to improve compared to populations that consumed as much

animal fat but had less access to fresh vegetables throughout the year.

To Powles, the antifat movement was founded on the Puritan notion that

" something bad had to have an evil cause, and you got a heart attack

because you did something wrong, which was eating too much of a bad

thing, rather than not having enough of a good thing. "

 

The other salient trade-off in the plus-minus problem of human diets is

carbohydrates. When the federal government began pushing low-fat diets,

the scientists and administrators, and virtually everyone else involved,

hoped that Americans would replace fat calories with fruits and

vegetables and legumes, but it didn't happen. If nothing else, economics

worked against it. The food industry has little incentive to advertise

nonproprietary items: broccoli, for instance. Instead, says NYU's

Nestle, the great bulk of the $30-billion-plus spent yearly on food

advertising goes to selling carbohydrates in the guise of fast food,

sodas, snacks, and candy bars. And carbohydrates are all too often what

Americans eat.

 

Carbohydrates are what Harvard's Willett calls the flip side of the

calorie trade-off problem. Because it is exceedingly difficult to add

pure protein to a diet in any quantity, a low-fat diet is, by

definition, a high-carbohydrate diet--just as a low-fat cookie or

low-fat yogurt are, by definition, high in carbohydrates. Numerous

studies now suggest that high-carbohydrate diets can raise triglyceride

levels, create small, dense LDL particles, and reduce HDL--a

combination, along with a condition known as " insulin resistance, " that

Stanford endocrinologist Gerald Reaven has labeled " syndrome X. " Thirty

percent of adult males and 10% to 15% of postmenopausal women have this

particular syndrome X profile, which is associated with a several-fold

increase in heart disease risk, says Reaven, even among those patients

whose LDL levels appear otherwise normal. Reaven and Ron Krauss, who

studies fats and lipids at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in

California, have shown that when men eat high-carbohydrate diets their

cholesterol profiles may shift from normal to syndrome X. In other

words, the more carbohydrates replace saturated fats, the more likely

the end result will be syndrome X and an increased heart disease risk.

" The problem is so clear right now it's almost a joke, " says Reaven. How

this balances out is the unknown. " It's a bitch of a question, " says

Marc Hellerstein, a nutritional biochemist at the University of

California, Berkeley, " maybe the great public health nutrition question

of our era. "

 

The other worrisome aspect of the carbohydrate trade-off is the

possibility that, for some individuals, at least, it might actually be

easier to gain weight on low-fat/high-carbohydrate regimens than on

higher fat diets. One of the many factors that influence hunger is the

glycemic index, which measures how fast carbohydrates are broken down

into simple sugars and moved into the bloodstream. Foods with the

highest glycemic index are simple sugars and processed grain products

like pasta and white rice, which cause a rapid rise in blood sugar after

a meal. Fruits, vegetables, legumes, and even unprocessed

starches--pasta al dente, for instance--cause a much slower rise in

blood sugar. Researchers have hypothesized that eating high-glycemic

index foods increases hunger later because insulin overreacts to the

spike in blood sugar. " The high insulin levels cause the nutrients from

the meal to get absorbed and very avidly stored away, and once they are,

the body can't access them, " says David Ludwig, director of the obesity

clinic at Children's Hospital Boston. " The body appears to run out of

fuel. " A few hours after eating, hunger returns.

 

If the theory is correct, calories from the kind of processed

carbohydrates that have become the staple of the American diet are not

the same as calories from fat, protein, or complex carbohydrates when it

comes to controlling weight. " They may cause a hormonal change that

stimulates hunger and leads to overeating, " says Ludwig, " especially in

environments where food is abundant. ... "

 

In 1979, 2 years after McGovern's committee released its Dietary Goals,

Ahrens wrote to The Lancet describing what he had learned over 30 years

of studying fat and cholesterol metabolism: " It is absolutely certain

that no one can reliably predict whether a change in dietary regimens

will have any effect whatsoever on the incidence of new events of

[coronary heart disease], nor in whom. " Today, many nutrition

researchers, acknowledging the complexity of the situation, find

themselves siding with Ahrens. Krauss, for instance, who chairs the AHA

Dietary Guidelines Committee, now calls it " scientifically naïve " to

expect that a single dietary regime can be beneficial for everybody:

" The 'goodness' or 'badness' of anything as complex as dietary fat and

its subtypes will ultimately depend on the context of the individual. "

 

Given the proven success and low cost of cholesterol-lowering drugs,

most physicians now prescribe drug treatment for patients at high risk

of heart disease. The drugs reduce LDL cholesterol levels by as much as

30%. Diet rarely drops LDL by more than 10%, which is effectively

trivial for healthy individuals, although it may be worth the effort for

those at high risk of heart disease whose cholesterol levels respond

well to it.

 

The logic underlying populationwide recommendations such as the latest

USDA Dietary Guidelines is that limiting saturated fat intake--even if

it does little or nothing to extend the lives of healthy individuals and

even if not all saturated fats are equally bad--might still delay tens

of thousands of deaths each year throughout the entire country. Limiting

total fat consumption is considered reasonable advice because it's

simple and easy to understand, and it may limit calorie intake. Whether

it's scientifically justifiable may simply not be relevant. " When you

don't have any real good answers in this business, " says Krauss, " you

have to accept a few not so good ones as the next best thing. "

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

" Everybody used to complain that industry didn't do anything on

nutrition, yet anybody who got involved was blackballed because their

positions were presumably influenced by the industry. "

Mark Hegsted

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

(The Washington Post) demonstrated that the board's " objectivity and

aptitude are in doubt " (The New York Times), or represented in the

board's guidelines a " blow against the food faddists who hold the public

in thrall " (Science). In any case, the NAS board had been publicly

discredited. Hegsted's Dietary Guidelines for Americans became the

official U.S. policy on dietary fat. Eat les fat. Live longer.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

" If you eat more of one thing, you eat a lot less of something else. So

for every theory saying this disease is caused by an excess of x, you

can produce an alternative theory saying it's a deficiency of y. "

Hugh Tunstall-Pedoe

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The anitfat movement was founded on the Puritan notion that " something

bad had to have an evil cause, and you got a heart attack becuse you did

something wrong, which was eating too much of a bad thing, rather than

not having enough of a good thing. "

John Powles

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

" Most of us would have predicted that if we can get the population to

change its fat intake, with its dense calories, we would see a reduction

in weight. In fact we see the exact opposite. "

William Harlan

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

" When you don't have and real good answers in this business, you have to

accept a few not so good ones as the next best thing. "

Ron Krauss

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