Stone-walling low-carbohydrate diets. Attack of the self-proclaimed ICQC

Posted: December 1, 2015 in Crisis in Nutrition, glucose, glycemic index, low-carbohydrate diet, misuse of statistics, Research Integrity
Tags: , , , , ,

The attack was quite sudden although it appeared to have been planned for many years. The paper was published last week (Augustin LS, Kendall CW, Jenkins DJ, Willett WC, Astrup A, Barclay AW, Bjorck I, Brand-Miller JC, Brighenti F, Buyken AE et al: Glycemic index, glycemic load and glycemic response: An International Scientific Consensus Summit from the International Carbohydrate Quality Consortium (ICQC). Nutr Metab Cardiovasc Dis 2015, 25(9):795-815.

Augustin_Stresa+Nov_27

As indicated by the title, responsibility was taken by the self-proclaimed ICQC.  It turned out to be a continuation of the long-standing attempt to use the glycemic index to co-opt the obvious benefits in control of the glucose-insulin axis while simultaneously attacking real low-carbohydrate diets. The authors participated in training in Stresa, Italy.

The operation was largely passive aggressive. While admitting the importance of dietary carbohydrate in controlling post-prandial glycemic,  low-carbohydrate diets were ignored. Well, not exactly. The authors actually had a strong attack.  The Abstract of the paper said (my emphasis):

Background and aims: The positive and negative health effects of dietary carbohydrates are of interest to both researchers and consumers.”

Methods: International experts on carbohydrate research held a scientific summit in Stresa, Italy, in June 2013 to discuss controversies surrounding the utility of the glycemic index (GI), glycemic load (GL) and glycemic response (GR).”

So, for the record, the paper is about dietary carbohydrate and about controversies.

The Results in Augustin, et al were simply

“The outcome was a scientific consensus statement which recognized the importance of postprandial glycemia in overall health, and the GI as a valid and reproducible method of classifying carbohydrate foods for this purpose…. Diets of low GI and GL were considered particularly important in individuals with insulin resistance.”

A definition is always a reproducible way of classifying things, and the conclusion is not controversial: glycemia is important.  Low-GI diets are a weak form of low-carbohydrate diet and they are frequently described as a politically correct form of carbohydrate restriction. It is at least a subset of carbohydrate restriction and one of the “controversies” cited in the Abstract is sensibly whether it is better or worse than total carbohydrate restriction. Astoundingly, this part of the controversy was ignored by the authors.  Our recent review of carbohydrate restriction in diabetes had this comparison:

 

 

15_Th_Westman_Jenkins_Mar25-2

A question of research integrity.

It is considered normal scientific protocol that, in a scientific field, especially one that is controversial, that you consider and cite alternative or competing points of view. So how do the authors see low-carbohydrate diets fitting in? If you search the pdf of Augustin, et al on “low-carbohydrate” or “low carbohydrate,” there are only two in the text:

“Very low carbohydrate-high protein diets also have beneficial effects on weight control and some cardiovascular risk factors (not LDL-cholesterol) in the short term, but are associated with increased mortality in long term cohort studies [156],”

and

“The lowest level of postprandial glycemia is achieved using very low carbohydrate-high protein diets, but these cannot be recommended for long term use.”

There are no references for the second statement but very low carbohydrate diets can be and frequently are recommended for long term use and have good results. I am not aware of “increased mortality in long term cohort studies” as in the first statement. In fact, low-carbohydrate diets are frequently criticized for not being subjected to long-term studies. So it was important to check out the studie(s) in reference 156:

[156] Pagona L, Sven S, Marie L, Dimitrios T, Hans-Olov A, Elisabete W. Low carbohydrate-high protein diet and incidence of cardiovascular diseases in Swedish women: prospective cohort study. BMJ 2012;344.

Documenting increased mortality.

The paper is not about mortality but rather about cardiovascular disease and, oddly, the authors are listed by their first names. (Actual reference: Lagiou P, Sandin S, Lof M, Trichopoulos D, Adami HO, Weiderpass E: . BMJ 2012, 344:e4026). This minor error probably reflects the close-knit “old boys” circle that functions on a first name basis although it may also indicate that the reference was not actually read so it was not discovered what the reference was really about.

Anyway, even though it is about cardiovascular disease, it is worth checking out. Who wants increased risk of anything. So what does Lagiou, et al say?

The Abstract of Lagiou says (my emphasis) “Main outcome measures: Association of incident cardiovascular diseases … with decreasing carbohydrate intake (in tenths), increasing protein intake (in tenths), and an additive combination of these variables (low carbohydrate-high protein score, from 2 to 20), adjusted for intake of energy, intake of saturated and unsaturated fat, and several non-dietary variables.”

Low-carbohydrate score? There were no low-carbohydrate diets. There were no diets at all. This was an analysis of “43, 396 Swedish women, aged 30-49 years at baseline, [who] completed an extensive dietary questionnaire and were followed-up for an average of 15.7 years.” The outcome variable, however, was only the “score” which the authors made up and which, as you might guess, was not seen and certainly not approved, by anybody with actual experience with low-carbohydrate diets. And, it turns out that “Among the women studied, carbohydrate intake at the low extreme of the distribution was higher and protein intake at the high extreme of the distribution was lower than the respective intakes prescribed by many weight control diets.” (In social media, this is called “face-palm”).

Whatever the method, though, I wanted to know how bad it was? The 12 years or so that I have been continuously on a low-carbohydrate diet might be considered pretty long term. What is my risk of CVD?

Results: A one tenth decrease in carbohydrate intake or increase in protein intake or a 2 unit increase in the low carbohydrate-high protein score were all statistically significantly associated with increasing incidence of cardiovascular disease overall (n=1270)—incidence rate ratio estimates 1.04 (95% confidence interval 1.00 to 1.08), 1.04 (1.02 to 1.06), and 1.05 (1.02 to 1.08).”

Rate ratio 1.04? And that’s an estimate.  That’s odds of 51:49.  That’s what I am supposed to be worried about. But that’s the relative risk. What about the absolute risk? There were 43 396 women in the study with 1270 incidents, or 2.9 % incidence overall.  So the absolute difference is about 1.48-1.42% = 0.06 % or less than 1/10 of 1 %.

Can such low numbers be meaningful? The usual answers is that if we scale them up to the whole population, we will save thousands of lives. Can we do that? Well, you can if the data are strong, that is, if we are really sure of the reliability of the independent variable. The relative risk in the Salk vaccine polio trial, for example, was in this ballpark but scaling up obviously paid off. In the Salk vaccine trial, however, we knew who got the vaccine and who didn’t. In distinction, food questionnaire’s have a bad reputation. Here is Lagiou’s description (you don’t really have to read this):

“We estimated the energy adjusted intakes of protein and carbohydrates for each woman, using the ‘residual method.’ This method allows evaluation of the “effect” of an energy generating nutrient, controlling for the energy generated by this nutrient, by using a simple regression of that nutrient on energy intake.…” and so on. I am not sure what it means but it certainly sounds like an estimate. So is the data itself any good? Well,

“After controlling for energy intake, however, distinguishing the effects of a specific energy generating nutrient is all but impossible, as a decrease in the intake of one is unavoidably linked to an increase in the intake of one or several of the others. Nevertheless, in this context, a low carbohydrate-high protein score allows the assessment of most low carbohydrate diets, which are generally high protein diets, because it integrates opposite changes of two nutrients with equivalent energy values.”

And “The long interval between exposure and outcome is a source of concern, because certain participants may change their dietary habits during the intervening period.”

Translation: we don’t really know what we did here.

In the end, Lagiou, et al admit “Our results do not answer questions concerning possible beneficial short term effects of low carbohydrate or high protein diets in the control of body weight or insulin resistance. Instead, they draw attention to the potential for considerable adverse effects on cardiovascular health of these diets….” Instead? I thought insulin resistance has an effect on CVD but if less than 1/10 of 1 % is “considerable adverse effects” what would something “almost zero” be.?

Coming back to the original paper by Augustin, et al, what about the comparison between low-GI diets and low-carbohydrate diets. The comparison in the figure above comes from Eric Westman’s lab. What do they have to say about that?

Augustin_

They missed this paper. Note: a comment I received suggested that I should have searched on “Eric” instead of “Westman.” Ha.

Overall, this is the evidence used by ICQC to tell you that low-carbohydrate diets would kill you. In the end, Augustin, et al is a hatchet-job, citing a meaningless paper at random. It is hard to understand why the journal took it. I will ask the editors to retract it.

Comments
  1. Dr Jay Wortman says:

    I’m sure they had a nice time in Stresa. I have often wanted to go to the Rockefeller institute in Bellagio. Maybe we should round up the usual suspects and have our own carbohydrate quality group or whatever and apply for a Bellagio scholarship.

  2. puddleg58 says:

    Good grief. If I wanted to answer the kind of question asked about “low carb diets” in Sweden, I’d look at the Malmo Diet and Cancer Study cohort, where it looks like they made a decent attempt to get food records as accurate as possible, and to screen out people who changed their diets.
    In men, higher fat = lower CVD mortality. In women, no change. Apart from that, no effect of any particular type of fat or carb on mortality or CVD incidence.
    Some possible synergy between saturated fat and fibre when it comes to preventing cardiovascular events (yes, low-GI is good – if you put cream on it).
    Dairy fat has a mild protective effect against diabetes, and liquid margarine or something similar may be associated with cancer in women. That’s about it.
    Consensus really is becoming a red flag waved by fools these days.
    Thank you for this hilarious but truthful analysis. Much appreciated.

  3. Dear Professor Feinman,

    Thank you for your time investment and dedication of analysis to modern nutrition research. I have a MS degree in Human Nutrition (not ever an RD, just couldn’t possibly be) and I agree with your insight into the contemporary knowledge and research publications in nutrition: they are absolutely pathetic!

    In the above analysis, what is on the y-axis of your graph?

    In general, you have revealed the feckless nature of the publication of these nutrition experts, yet again.

    Did you attend the conference? Stresa, Italy is a beautiful place! Perhaps that was the real point of the conference.

    Thank you for your writing and analyses. I am happy to have stumbled upon your work on the almighty internet.

    Edna

  4. Gary Ogden says:

    The location is reminiscent of Ancel Key’s “science.” I’ll join you in Bellagio. I have no alphabet soup after my name, but I can make stuff up as well as Augustin, et al can.

  5. Martin Levac says:

    Richard, do not hold a hot drink while reading: http://www.researchgate.net/publication/262487895_ICQC_response_to_Health_Canada_evaluation_of_GI_claims

    “Informed consumers would anticipate that the greater the amount of the available carbohydrate consumed, the greater the increase in blood glucose. The key value of the GI therefore is that it allows comparisons between foods on a gram-for-gram carbohydrate basis, which is important for
    consumer choice.”

    The key value of the GI…lol

  6. Kurt Lass says:

    Thanks for the tear down. Both papers ought to be retracted…

    Many of the same players reconvened recently at another “Oldways” “Common Ground Consensus” conference in in Boston. George Henderson eviscerated them with a rant in a blog post few days back.

    “Consensus” is like “Meta-analysis” – Only as good as the input data. Garbage in = garbage out

    The Stresa paper is really an advertising brochure for low GI/GL masquerading as a scientific paper. Advertising brochures never mention anything which might negatively impact the message, hence the failure to cite Westman.

    Good luck with the retraction request – it deserves it.

  7. Kim Michael says:

    Thank you – always a pleasure to read you!

  8. Stipetic says:

    When I hear talk of concensus, such as seen in this paper, I think of Michael Crichton’s quote: “Historically, the claim of consensus has been the first refuge of scoundrels; it is a way to avoid debate by claiming that the matter is already settled.”

    Then I look at the authors of the paper and I know Crichton was right.

    • rdfeinman says:

      That’s it. Exactly right.

    • Bryan Harris says:

      I always think of Richard Feynman’s (hehe the other one) story about the text books. He disagreed with a book and was told, “It was approved by 65 engineers!!!” And none of those ‘engineers’ even read the book in question…

      http://www.textbookleague.org/103feyn.htm

      But to be honest, the Crichton quote is really good and probably a lot easier to explain to people.

    • Twitchy says:

      Thank you, I was waiting for someone to mention the authors. I saw Willett and Brand-Miller. Are there *any* low-carb sympathizers among the authors, or in the entire “organization” of the ICQC?

      • rdfeinman says:

        Arne Astrup is an author on our diabetes paper and is sympathetic to low carb and i gave him a hard time about the paper and he doesn’t want to defend it. He probably did not give it a lot of thought and may not have noticed the offending comments about low carb. In the end, papers in the nutrition literature are mostly not real scientific papers, any more than ICQC is a real organization and one doesn’t really know how much harm each are doing..

  9. Spittinchips says:

    Nice.

    I see that Brand-Miller still has idle hands. Some people clearly have no shame.

    For a little slice of her history, see the “Australian Paradox” links posted by blogger Passthecream in the comments section on Hyperlipid – http://high-fat-nutrition.blogspot.com.au/2015/08/sweden-dietician-advice-no-thank-you.html

    Cheers.

  10. Dr Jay Wortman says:

    Seeing all those apologists for industry there, it makes me wonder who paid for that little Italian retreat.

  11. Who funds the ICQC? Processed food industry? Someone is spending quite a bit, not only for studies but for nice trips also.

  12. Dr Feinman, thanks for taking your time to review this worthless “consensus statement.” I thought you might have mentioned the sponsors of the work, but see you took the high road, so I will.

    “The Glycemic Index, Glycemic Load and Glycemic Response: an International Scientific Consensus Summit” was supported by: Mondelez International, Barilla G&R F.lli, Ferrero, Rigoni di Asiago, Agrico, Ingredion Incorporated, General Mills, Beneo Institute, Glycemic Index Foundation, Glycemic Index Laboratories, Kellogg Europe, SUGiRS (Sydney University Glycemic Index Research Service), Enervit, Meal Garden.

    And the “Conflicts of Interest” section spanned four pages, I think that is the longest I have seen.

    Although they “recognized the importance of postprandial glycemia in overall health,” they missed the mark on how best to achieve that, the low carbohydrate high fat (not high protein) dietary lifestyle.

    • rdfeinman says:

      I think this is tricky. In research, the deal is that if the author says that the sponsor had no influence on the research, on must take tham at their word. Otherwise science could not advance. But, maybe yes, once they form a consortium they should sensibly avoid even the appearance of influence. But the whole thing is becoming foolish. In order to face the failure of low-fat but not admit that Dr. Atkins (in the generic sense: any low-carb diet), one group is going with low-GI which means that sugar is a more or less good thing. The next group thinks that sugar is poison. But, if each pretends that the other is exaggerated, they can spends millions of research dollars on meaningless experiments depriving real science of funding.

  13. Spittinchips says:

    Posted, but didn’t appear, so this may be a double post.

    The Brand-Miller name sounded familiar. It seems she has form in this sort of nonsense – refer to Passthecream’s links in the comments section here –

    http://high-fat-nutrition.blogspot.com.au/2015/08/sweden-dietician-advice-no-thank-you.html

    Cheers.

  14. raphaels7 says:

    They can get away with it, which seems to be reason enough to muddy the nutritional science waters even further.

  15. Garry Lee says:

    Sometimes you have to go for your gun.
    Walter the Wanker Willett.

  16. Martin Levac says:

    Richard, the ICQC published a position paper in 2014. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3894682/ Part of paragraph 6:

    “Informed consumers would anticipate that the greater the amount of the available carbohydrate consumed, the greater the increase in blood glucose. The key value of the GI therefore is that it allows comparisons between foods on a gram-for-gram carbohydrate basis, which is important for consumer choice.”

  17. […] hace mucho Richard Feinman habló de un artículo que decía que en estudios observacionales las dietas low-carb estaban […]

  18. “Very low carbohydrate-high protein diets also have beneficial effects on weight control and some cardiovascular risk factors (not LDL-cholesterol) in the short term, but are associated with increased mortality in long term cohort studies [156],”

    That was “news” to me also. I’ve been recommending VLC-higher protein diets to many of my patients since 2009.

    Thanks for debunking the ICQC’s erroneous interpretation of reference 156, Dr. Feinman!

  19. jgeeone says:

    I see WC Willett among the “authors”. I am always suspicious when I see that name!

  20. Thank you Dr. Feinman your work helps my patients daily.

Leave a reply to Keith Runyan, MD Cancel reply