Ultra-processed foods,which account for up to 60 per cent of people’s daily energy intake in high-income Western countries,is an umbrella term for a wide array of industrially manufactured products,which contain additives like artificial flavours,emulsifiers,colours,sweeteners and preservatives.
They include many mass-produced packaged breakfast cereals and breads,biscuits,pastries and confectionary,reconstituted meat products,instant noodles,sweetened carbonated drinks,vegan “meat” and “cheese” alternatives,plant-based milks,sweetened yoghurts,infant formulas and ready-to-heat meals.
And while previous research has linked a high intake of ultra-processed foods (UPFs) with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease,type 2 diabetes and cancer,the association with having more than one chronic illness – referred to as multimorbidity – has not been explored.
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So for the study,published inThe Lancet,researchers from the World Health Organisation’s cancer research agency IARC,looked at the diets of 266,666 healthy adult participants,then followed up with their health outcomes 11 years later.
About 22,000 developed cancer,and about 11,000 developed cardiovascular disease,while approximately another 11,000 developed type 2 diabetes. In total,4461 developed cancer along with cardiovascular disease or type 2 diabetes. Based on their analysis,the authors wrote:“A higher consumption of UPFs was associated with a higher risk of multimorbidity of cancer and cardiometabolic diseases.”
But it wasn’t just any UPF that increased this risk. Specifically,higher intakes of artificially and sugar-sweetened drinks,as well as processed meats were associated with higher risk of multimorbidity,as were sauces,spreads and condiments – though to a lesser extent.