Trans
Fatty Acids: The Heart of the Matter
Today's Dietitian
By Kate Jackson
Vol. 6 No. 2 p. 36
Do trans fatty acids (TFAs)—the latest
household buzzwords in nutrition—contribute to cardiovascular
disease?
According to leading nutrition experts, they do
indeed. Is their role in the development of heart disease significant
enough to justify their inclusion on nutrition labels? Is the link
to poor heart health compelling enough to mandate a change in the
public’s dietary habits? Do they rival saturated fats as threats
to cardiovascular health? The answers to those questions vary depending
on who you ask.
At one end of the opinion spectrum is Elizabeth
Whelan, ScD, MPH, an epidemiologist who heads the American Council
on Science and Health (ACSH), which describes itself as a consortium
of more than 350 scientists and physicians dedicated to consumer
education on public health issues. It describes its mission as helping
the public distinguish between “real health risks and hypothetical
or trivial health scares.” Whelan suggests that the dire warnings
about TFAs are heavy on hyperbole.
At the other end of the argument is the notoriously
vigilant D.C. watchdog group the Center for Science in the Public
Interest (CSPI), which has petitioned the FDA to mandate the labeling
of foods with TFA content for 10 years. The CSPI, the organization
that’s made Mexican and Chinese food guilty pleasures and
has renamed fettucine alfredo “heart attack on a plate,”
views TFAs as a significant and hidden health threat to American
consumers.
What’s at the heart of this contentiousness?
Although they may be naturally present in foods such as beef and
dairy products, TFAs, or unsaturated fatty acids, more commonly
result from a manufacturing technique that essentially whips liquid
fats such as vegetable oil into solid fats. These “partially
hydrogenated oils,” which lend texture and density to foods,
are present in large quantities in spreads such as margarine and
shortening, packaged foods such as cake mixes, some soups, deep-fried
foods (including many fast foods), many frozen foods, commercially
baked products such as donuts, potato chips, crackers, cereals,
energy bars, cookies, candy, nondairy creamers, dips, gravy mixes,
and salad dressings.
Studies have linked diets high in TFAs to an increased
risk of cardiovascular disease. Some suggest that the risk is similar
to that of those posed by saturated fats, while others indicate
that TFAs may pose an even greater hazard. Moreover, consumption
of TFAs has been implicated in the development of type 2 diabetes
and cancer. A recent study has also suggested that it may play a
role in increasing the risk of Alzheimer’s disease.
As researchers uncovered a connection between intake
of TFAs and an increased ratio of low-density lipoproteins (LDLs)
to high-density lipoproteins (HDLs), the media have generally portrayed
TFAs as health blasters—a dietary hazard equal to or greater
than that posed by cholesterol and saturated fats. Many concerned
consumers have begun to scrutinize their diets and drastically reduce
or attempt to eliminate TFAs. But, they have had little hope of
determining how much trans fat is lurking in the foods they eat.
Until now.
This summer, the FDA announced its decision to require
food manufacturers to include information about TFAs on their products’
nutrition labeling along with information already listed about total
fat content, as well as percentages of saturated, monounsaturated,
and polyunsaturated fats.
While the FDA’s ruling will help consumers
know how many grams of TFAs are in their food, it won’t help
them know how much is too much. Other lipids on food labels are
listed not only in terms of the number of grams of fat they contain,
but also as a percentage of one’s Recommended Daily Intake
of that fat. Unlike the food label listings pertaining to other
fats, those for TFAs will include no “daily value.”
The FDA’s ruling relied heavily on reports
from the Institute of Medicine (IOM), which did not conclude safe
limits of TFAs. The IOM report acknowledged that TFAs are so widespread
in foods that eliminating them from one’s diet would be nearly
impossible and to attempt to do so could eliminate certain foods
to the extent that it would pose the risk of nutritional deficiency.
Nevertheless, the institute’s message was
clear: Avoid consumption of TFAs. As a result, the new food labels
will carry a footnote indicating that “intake of trans fats
should be as low as possible.”
While this new rule won’t require food makers
to list the quantities of TFAs in their products until January 2006,
it certainly has food manufacturers scrambling to reduce the amount
of TFAs in their products contain. Expect to see labeling and advertising
that touts a product’s lack of TFAs. Furthermore, it has created
widespread media attention, most of which has portrayed TFAs as
a serious health hazard.
In light of the media’s renewed interest,
and while the CSPI and the American Dietetic Association (ADA) have
praised the FDA’s action in general, Whelan questions the
government’s basis for requiring labeling of TFAs and asserts
that the consequence of labeling will be little or nothing more
than an unnecessary increase in costs as food manufacturers pass
along the bill for labeling.
Whelan responded to a request for comment by referring
Today’s Dietitian to the ACSH’s Web site, which contains
an article titled “Dietary Demons” that outlines her
opposition to labeling and her assertion that the entire issue of
TFAs has been wildly overblown by the media. She charges that the
press’s response to the FDA’s action was out of proportion,
biased, and lacking in scientific substance. She takes issue with
the notion that TFAs are a leading cause of heart disease and should
be avoided.
While acknowledging that TFAs raise blood cholesterol
and influence the levels of HDLs and LDLs, Whelan suggests that
other factors, such as genetics and cigarette smoking, are more
pertinent and that medication may be more effective than dietary
changes in reducing cholesterol levels and thus preventing coronary
heart disease.
Ruth Kava, PhD, RD, director of nutrition at the
ACSH, agrees. “Yes, I think TFAs have been overhyped as being
something that’s terribly dangerous. We’ve had trans
fats in our diets for a long time. I mean, they may not have been
in fast foods from the word go, but people have used Crisco shortening
for decades, and that’s nothing if it’s not hydrogenated
fat. So it’s there, and it’s been there.” Kava
acknowledges that the levels of TFAs that are consumed may have
increased but expresses the belief that rates of heart disease have
been getting better, which she concludes “is probably due
to people quitting smoking.”
Like Whelan, Kava feels the media, along with activist
groups, are largely responsible for stirring the pot. “Any
time you get all this media attention, and there are a few activist
groups like CSPI that tend to hyperbolize to a certain extent, I
think they exaggerate the risks,” Kava says.
About the CSPI, she observes that “their sound
bytes are very earcatching—heart attack on a plate or artery-clogging
fat—those phrases people can easily remember. Their point,
I think, is to get people to pay attention to some of these issues,
but along the way, I think that they exaggerate in order to get
people’s attention.” This exaggeration, she suggests,
takes people’s attention away from an emphasis on a healthy
diet and focuses them on a dangerous food.
Not only does Whelan minimize the hazards, but she
reminds readers of the benefits of TFAs: They prolong the shelf
life of foods, help products retain their flavor, and are useful
for frying foods. Finally, she maintains that the benefits of “labeling
and phasing out” trans fats are unclear. “The government
estimates that perhaps 250 to 500 coronary heart disease deaths
[out of the total 500,000 that occur annually in the United States]
will be prevented. But, those numbers are purely hypothetical,”
she says, adding that “the real number of lives saved might
be zero.”
In response, David Schardt, senior nutritionist,
CSPI, suggests that because Whelan is inclined to defend the processed
food industry, she downplays the significance of TFAs. “Yes,”
he says, “trans fat is one of many factors influencing the
risk of heart disease. But, it’s a potent one, strongly affecting
one of the most important risk factors by raising blood levels of
the LDLs. True, the role of trans fat is not as well-studied as
cholesterol levels, but study after study has shown that we should
avoid this processed fat.”
Schardt says that Whelan’s belief that Americans
will not pay due attention to the hazards of smoking, high blood
pressure, and obesity and focus instead on the threat of trans fats
underestimates the intelligence of U.S. consumers. “There
is no evidence that this is happening or would happen,” he
says. “No responsible health organization has suggested that
warnings about smoking, hypertension, or obesity should be replaced
by warnings about trans fat.”
He also takes issue with Whelan’s assessment
of TFAs’ benefits and the cost of adding TFAs to nutrition
labels. The benefit of TFAs, Schardt says, are to produce fatty
foods more cheaply, which increases obesity and thus contributes
to cardiovascular disease. “Whelan worries that low-income
Americans will have to pay a greater portion of their disposable
income for foods made without trans fat,” he says. “That
shows little faith in the ingenuity of American food scientists,
who are working on healthier substitutes for trans fat. Of far greater
threat to the pocketbooks and health of low-income Americans is
the abundance of heavily advertised high-calorie foods, including
many with relatively high levels of trans fat. If consumers were
to eat fewer of these foods, they would likely save money on healthcare
costs in the future.”
It may not be surprising that the CSPI, which many
believe overstates nutritional threats, takes issue with Whelan’s
statements. But, the ADA is puzzled by her position as well. ADA
spokesperson Cindy Moore admits to surprise at being in more or
less complete agreement with the CSPI and confused by Whelan’s
assertions that the FDA acted without solid scientific input. “The
Institute of Medicine’s National Academy of Sciences’
report came out in 2002, and the individuals who were on that commission
were all scientists,” she says.
“What came directly out of the report was
the recommendation that trans fatty acid consumption should be as
low as possible while maintaining a nutritionally adequate diet.
The report also concluded that TFAs behave like saturated fatty
acids and raise LDL cholesterol.”
Moore explains that there have been many human-feeding
studies and epidemiological studies that do show a positive association
between the intake of TFAs and the incidence of coronary heart disease.
These findings are reported on the FDA Web site. “To me, there
is an ample amount of evidence that supports the recommendations
for Americans to try to consume less foods with TFAs,” she
says.
Moore also notes that the media take a bad rap for
their coverage of the issue. “I thought that the media covered
the topic appropriately.”
Moore takes exception with Whelan’s assertion
that diet is less important than medication in controlling cholesterol.
“The National Cholesterol Education Program guidelines advocate
diet as the first targeting point to help lower cholesterol, and
the American Heart Association guidelines that came out in 2002
advocate diet modifications to reduce the risk of coronary heart
disease,” she explains.
Moore suggests that the bottom line for consumers
is to eat foods that are going to be wholesome and contribute a
variety of nutrients. She recommends following the U.S. Department
of Agriculture Food Guide Pyramid, which suggests eating a variety
of foods, including fruits, vegetables, whole grains, low-fat sources
of calcium, and lean sources of protein. By following these guidelines,
she says, “Individuals are going to reduce their intake of
TFAs, saturated fat, and cholesterol.”
— Kate Jackson is a staff writer for Today’s
Dietitian.
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