Do Low-Fat Diets Curb Disease?
Reported July 07, 2006
The theory that eating less fat can help prevent
disease suffered a setback today with the release of a large-scale study that
failed to show such a diet lowered older women's risk of breast and colon
cancer, and heart disease.
Health researchers are not giving up on the low-fat message, however, and say
the new study has too many shortcomings to provide a clear answer on the health
benefits of eating less fat.
The new study was conducted by researchers with the Women's Health Initiative, a
$415 million National Institutes of Health study of nearly 49,000 postmenopausal
women.
They analyzed the health of women who ate a diet lower in fat and higher in
vegetables, fruits and grains over an eight-year period. The low-fat group was
compared with women on a regular diet.
At the end of the study, the low-fat group did not show a significantly lower
risk of developing breast cancer, colon cancer or heart disease and strokes.
Results of the study were published in several articles in today's issue of the
Journal of the American Medical Association.
Questions About Study's Limitations
In e-mails and phone interviews that ABC News conducted with more than 50
specialists in heart disease, cancer and nutrition, questions were raised about
the shortcomings of the study. Among the concerns:
The study was too short in duration to detect reduction in breast and colon
cancer from fat reduction. Eight years is not enough time to see a reduction in
cancers that often take decades to develop, experts said.
The amount of fat reduction was too small. The researchers hoped to get the
low-fat dieters to reduce fat intake by 20 percent, but they only achieved, on
average, a less than 10 percent reduction. Heart researchers say such a small
decrease is unlikely to produce meaningful benefits.
The researchers simply looked at fat intake in general and did not distinguish
between healthy fats like olive oil and unhealthy fats like trans fats, which
increase cholesterol.
Fat Does Matter
Whatever the concern, the lackluster findings do not mean people should add more
fat to their diets, because some small health benefits were seen in the low-fat
group, said Dr. Jacques Rossouw, the Women's Health Initiative project officer.
Notably, the low-fat eaters had lower body weight, blood pressure and "bad"
cholesterol levels, he said.
"I hope it [the study's findings] doesn't say to the public that oh, fat doesn't
matter," he said.
Also, Dr. George L. Blackburn, the associate director of nutrition at Harvard
Medical School, said that the breast cancer data was promising.
At the end of eight years, the incidence of breast cancer was 9 percent lower in
the women on the reduced-fat diet; the finding was not statistically significant
but "provides suggestive evidence that the risk of breast cancer my be modified
by changing an individual diet," he said.
Because one of the chief concerns raised about the study was that it was too
short, one Women's Health Initiative researcher said they will follow the women
for another five years to see if stronger patterns emerge, especially since
diseases like cancer can take years to develop.
"There is some evidence that with longer follow-up we might come to some
different conclusions," said Shirley Beresford, a Women's Health Initiative
investigator and professor of epidemiology at the School of Public Health and
Community Medicine at the University of Washington in Seattle.
Harvard School of Public Health epidemiology professor Dr. Meir Stampfer was not
surprised by the study's results and said a study on the different types of fat
may have been more useful.
"For heart disease, it is the type of fat and type of grain," he said.
Also Dr. David Katz, an ABC News Medical correspondent and Yale School of Public
Health professor, said that the dietary changes may have been started too late
in life.
"The benefits of a healthful diet accrue slowly over time; an eight-year period
postmenopause may be an after-the-fact intervention," he said.
For people wondering if they should change their diets because of these studies,
dietitian Keith-Thomas Ayoob of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine has a
clear answer.
"Absolutely not."
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