Feb. 27, 2013 —
Does eating too much sugar cause diabetes? For years, scientists have
said "not exactly." Eating too much of any food, including sugar, can
cause you to gain weight; it's the resulting obesity that predisposes
people to diabetes, according to the prevailing theory.
But now the
results of a large epidemiological study suggest sugar may also have a
direct, independent link to diabetes. Researchers from the Stanford
University School of Medicine, the University of California-Berkeley and
the University of California-San Francisco examined data on sugar
availability and diabetes rates from 175 countries over the past decade.
After accounting for obesity and a large array of other factors, the
researchers found that increased sugar in a population's food supply was
linked to higher diabetes rates, independent of obesity rates.
Their study was published Feb. 27 inPLOS ONE.
"It was quite a
surprise," said Sanjay Basu, MD, PhD, an assistant professor of
medicine at the Stanford Prevention Research Center and the study's lead
author. The research was conducted while Basu was a medical resident at
UCSF.
The study
provides the first large-scale, population-based evidence for the idea
that not all calories are equal from a diabetes-risk standpoint, Basu
said. "We're not diminishing the importance of obesity at all, but these
data suggest that at a population level there are additional factors
that contribute to diabetes risk besides obesity and total calorie
intake, and that sugar appears to play a prominent role."
Specifically,
more sugar was correlated with more diabetes: For every additional 150
calories of sugar available per person per day, the prevalence of
diabetes in the population rose 1 percent, even after controlling for
obesity, physical activity, other types of calories and a number of
economic and social variables. A 12-ounce can of soda contains about 150
calories of sugar. In contrast, an additional 150 calories of any type
caused only a 0.1 percent increase in the population's diabetes rate.
Not only was
sugar availability correlated to diabetes risk, but the longer a
population was exposed to excess sugar, the higher its diabetes rate
after controlling for obesity and other factors. In addition, diabetes
rates dropped over time when sugar availability dropped, independent of
changes to consumption of other calories and physical activity or
obesity rates.
The findings do
not prove that sugar causes diabetes, Basu emphasized, but do provide
real-world support for the body of previous laboratory and experimental
trials that suggest sugar affects the liver and pancreas in ways that
other types of foods or obesity do not. "We really put the data through a
wringer in order to test it out," Basu said.
The study used
food-supply data from the United Nations Food and Agricultural
Organization to estimate the availability of different foods in the 175
countries examined, as well as estimates from the International Diabetes
Foundation on the prevalence of diabetes among 20- to 79-year-olds. The
researchers employed new statistical methods derived from econometrics
to control for factors that could provide alternate explanations for an
apparent link between sugar and diabetes, including overweight and
obesity; many non-sugar components of the food supply, such as fiber,
fruit, meat, cereals and oils; total calories available per day;
sedentary behavior; rates of economic development; household income;
urbanization of the population; tobacco and alcohol use; and percentage
of the population age 65 or older, since age is also associated with
diabetes risk.
"Epidemiology
cannot directly prove causation," said Robert Lustig, MD, pediatric
endocrinologist at UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital and the senior
author of the study. "But in medicine, we rely on the postulates of Sir
Austin Bradford Hill to examine associations to infer causation, as we
did with smoking. You expose the subject to an agent, you get a disease;
you take the agent away, the disease gets better; you re-expose and the
disease gets worse again. This study satisfies those criteria, and
places sugar front and center."
"As far as I
know, this is the first paper that has had data on the relationship of
sugar consumption to diabetes," said Marion Nestle, PhD, a professor of
nutrition, food studies and public health at New York University who was
not involved in the study. "This has been a source of controversy
forever. It's been very, very difficult to separate sugar from the
calories it provides. This work is carefully done, it's interesting and
it deserves attention."
The fact that
the paper used data obtained over time is an important strength, Basu
said. "Point-in-time studies are susceptible to all kinds of reverse
causality," he said. "For instance, people who are already diabetic or
obese might eat more sugars due to food cravings."
The researchers
had to rely on food-availability data for this study instead of
consumption data because no large-scale international databases exist to
measure food consumption directly. Basu said follow-up studies are
needed to examine possible links between diabetes and specific sugar
sources, such as high-fructose corn syrup or sucrose, and also to
evaluate the influence of specific foods, such as soft drinks or
processed foods.
Another
important future step, he said, is to conduct randomized clinical trials
that could affirm a cause-and-effect connection between sugar
consumption and diabetes. Although it would be unethical to feed people
large amounts of sugar to try to induce diabetes, scientists could put
participants of a study on a low-sugar diet to see if it reduces
diabetes risk.
Basu was
cautious about possible policy implications of his work, stating that
more evidence is needed before enacting widespread policies to lower
sugar consumption.
However, Nestle
pointed out that the findings add to many other studies that suggest
people should cut back on their sugar intake. "How much circumstantial
evidence do you need before you take action?" she said. "At this point
we have enough circumstantial evidence to advise people to keep their
sugar a lot lower than it normally is."
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