The share of ultra-processed foods and the overall nutritional quality of diets in the US: evidence from a nationally representative cross-sectional study
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Abstract
Background
Recent population dietary studies indicate that diets rich in ultra-processed foods,
increasingly frequent worldwide, are grossly nutritionally unbalanced, suggesting
that the dietary contribution of these foods largely determines the overall nutritional
quality of contemporaneous diets. Yet, these studies have focused on individual nutrients
(one at a time) rather than the overall nutritional quality of the diets. Here we
investigate the relationship between the energy contribution of ultra-processed foods
in the US diet and its content of critical nutrients, individually and overall.
Methods
We evaluated dietary intakes of 9,317 participants from 2009 to 2010 NHANES aged 1+
years. Food items were classified into unprocessed or minimally processed foods, processed
culinary ingredients, processed foods, and ultra-processed foods. First, we examined
the average dietary content of macronutrients, micronutrients, and fiber across quintiles
of the energy contribution of ultra-processed foods. Then, we used Principal Component
Analysis (PCA) to identify a nutrient-balanced dietary pattern to enable the assessment
of the overall nutritional quality of the diet. Linear regression was used to explore
the association between the dietary share of ultra-processed foods and the balanced-pattern
PCA factor score. The scores were thereafter categorized into tertiles, and their
distribution was examined across ultra-processed food quintiles. All models incorporated
survey sample weights and were adjusted for age, sex, race/ethnicity, family income,
and educational attainment.
Results
The average content of protein, fiber, vitamins A, C, D, and E, zinc, potassium, phosphorus,
magnesium, and calcium in the US diet decreased significantly across quintiles of
the energy contribution of ultra-processed foods, while carbohydrate, added sugar,
and saturated fat contents increased. An inverse dose–response association was found
between ultra-processed food quintiles and overall dietary quality measured through
a nutrient-balanced-pattern PCA-derived factor score characterized by being richer
in fiber, potassium, magnesium and vitamin C, and having less saturated fat and added
sugars.
Conclusions
This study suggests that decreasing the dietary share of ultra-processed foods is
a rational and effective way to improve the nutritional quality of US diets.
Electronic supplementary material
The online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12963-017-0119-3) contains supplementary
material, which is available to authorized users.
In an article that forms part of the PLoS Medicine series on Big Food, David Stuckler and colleagues report that unhealthy packaged foods are being consumed rapidly in low- and middle-income countries, consistent with rapid expansion of multinational food companies into emerging markets and fueling obesity and chronic disease epidemics.
This paper describes a new food classification which assigns foodstuffs according to the extent and purpose of the industrial processing applied to them. Three main groups are defined: unprocessed or minimally processed foods (group 1), processed culinary and food industry ingredients (group 2), and ultra-processed food products (group 3). The use of this classification is illustrated by applying it to data collected in the Brazilian Household Budget Survey which was conducted in 2002/2003 through a probabilistic sample of 48,470 Brazilian households. The average daily food availability was 1,792 kcal/person being 42.5% from group 1 (mostly rice and beans and meat and milk), 37.5% from group 2 (mostly vegetable oils, sugar, and flours), and 20% from group 3 (mostly breads, biscuits, sweets, soft drinks, and sausages). The share of group 3 foods increased with income, and represented almost one third of all calories in higher income households. The impact of the replacement of group 1 foods and group 2 ingredients by group 3 products on the overall quality of the diet, eating patterns and health is discussed.
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