I am posting teh entire long piece below as I think it is an important
discussion to have - I wanted the opinions of the folks here, some of
whom have been saying similar things for many years.

Udhay

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/17/magazine/mag-17Sugar-t.html?_r=2&pagewanted=all

April 13, 2011
Is Sugar Toxic?
By GARY TAUBES

On May 26, 2009, Robert Lustig gave a lecture called “Sugar: The
Bitter Truth,” which was posted on YouTube the following July. Since
then, it has been viewed well over 800,000 times, gaining new viewers
at a rate of about 50,000 per month, fairly remarkable numbers for a
90-minute discussion of the nuances of fructose biochemistry and human
physiology.

Lustig is a specialist on pediatric hormone disorders and the leading
expert in childhood obesity at the University of California, San
Francisco, School of Medicine, which is one of the best medical
schools in the country. He published his first paper on childhood
obesity a dozen years ago, and he has been treating patients and doing
research on the disorder ever since.

The viral success of his lecture, though, has little to do with
Lustig’s impressive credentials and far more with the persuasive case
he makes that sugar is a “toxin” or a “poison,” terms he uses together
13 times through the course of the lecture, in addition to the five
references to sugar as merely “evil.” And by “sugar,” Lustig means not
only the white granulated stuff that we put in coffee and sprinkle on
cereal — technically known as sucrose — but also high-fructose corn
syrup, which has already become without Lustig’s help what he calls
“the most demonized additive known to man.”

It doesn’t hurt Lustig’s cause that he is a compelling public speaker.
His critics argue that what makes him compelling is his practice of
taking suggestive evidence and insisting that it’s incontrovertible.
Lustig certainly doesn’t dabble in shades of gray. Sugar is not just
an empty calorie, he says; its effect on us is much more insidious.
“It’s not about the calories,” he says. “It has nothing to do with the
calories. It’s a poison by itself.”

If Lustig is right, then our excessive consumption of sugar is the
primary reason that the numbers of obese and diabetic Americans have
skyrocketed in the past 30 years. But his argument implies more than
that. If Lustig is right, it would mean that sugar is also the likely
dietary cause of several other chronic ailments widely considered to
be diseases of Western lifestyles — heart disease, hypertension and
many common cancers among them.

The number of viewers Lustig has attracted suggests that people are
paying attention to his argument. When I set out to interview public
health authorities and researchers for this article, they would often
initiate the interview with some variation of the comment “surely
you’ve spoken to Robert Lustig,” not because Lustig has done any of
the key research on sugar himself, which he hasn’t, but because he’s
willing to insist publicly and unambiguously, when most researchers
are not, that sugar is a toxic substance that people abuse. In
Lustig’s view, sugar should be thought of, like cigarettes and
alcohol, as something that’s killing us.

This brings us to the salient question: Can sugar possibly be as bad
as Lustig says it is?

It’s one thing to suggest, as most nutritionists will, that a
healthful diet includes more fruits and vegetables, and maybe less
fat, red meat and salt, or less of everything. It’s entirely different
to claim that one particularly cherished aspect of our diet might not
just be an unhealthful indulgence but actually be toxic, that when you
bake your children a birthday cake or give them lemonade on a hot
summer day, you may be doing them more harm than good, despite all the
love that goes with it. Suggesting that sugar might kill us is what
zealots do. But Lustig, who has genuine expertise, has accumulated and
synthesized a mass of evidence, which he finds compelling enough to
convict sugar. His critics consider that evidence insufficient, but
there’s no way to know who might be right, or what must be done to
find out, without discussing it.

If I didn’t buy this argument myself, I wouldn’t be writing about it
here. And I also have a disclaimer to acknowledge. I’ve spent much of
the last decade doing journalistic research on diet and chronic
disease — some of the more contrarian findings, on dietary fat,
appeared in this magazine —– and I have come to conclusions similar to
Lustig’s.

The history of the debate over the health effects of sugar has gone on
far longer than you might imagine. It is littered with erroneous
statements and conclusions because even the supposed authorities had
no true understanding of what they were talking about. They didn’t
know, quite literally, what they meant by the word “sugar” and
therefore what the implications were.

So let’s start by clarifying a few issues, beginning with Lustig’s use
of the word “sugar” to mean both sucrose — beet and cane sugar,
whether white or brown — and high-fructose corn syrup. This is a
critical point, particularly because high-fructose corn syrup has
indeed become “the flashpoint for everybody’s distrust of processed
foods,” says Marion Nestle, a New York University nutritionist and the
author of “Food Politics.”

This development is recent and borders on humorous. In the early
1980s, high-fructose corn syrup replaced sugar in sodas and other
products in part because refined sugar then had the reputation as a
generally noxious nutrient. (“Villain in Disguise?” asked a headline
in this paper in 1977, before answering in the affirmative.)
High-fructose corn syrup was portrayed by the food industry as a
healthful alternative, and that’s how the public perceived it. It was
also cheaper than sugar, which didn’t hurt its commercial prospects.
Now the tide is rolling the other way, and refined sugar is making a
commercial comeback as the supposedly healthful alternative to this
noxious corn-syrup stuff. “Industry after industry is replacing their
product with sucrose and advertising it as such — ‘No High-Fructose
Corn Syrup,’ ” Nestle notes.

But marketing aside, the two sweeteners are effectively identical in
their biological effects. “High-fructose corn syrup, sugar — no
difference,” is how Lustig put it in a lecture that I attended in San
Francisco last December. “The point is they’re each bad — equally bad,
equally poisonous.”

Refined sugar (that is, sucrose) is made up of a molecule of the
carbohydrate glucose, bonded to a molecule of the carbohydrate
fructose — a 50-50 mixture of the two. The fructose, which is almost
twice as sweet as glucose, is what distinguishes sugar from other
carbohydrate-rich foods like bread or potatoes that break down upon
digestion to glucose alone. The more fructose in a substance, the
sweeter it will be. High-fructose corn syrup, as it is most commonly
consumed, is 55 percent fructose, and the remaining 45 percent is
nearly all glucose. It was first marketed in the late 1970s and was
created to be indistinguishable from refined sugar when used in soft
drinks. Because each of these sugars ends up as glucose and fructose
in our guts, our bodies react the same way to both, and the
physiological effects are identical. In a 2010 review of the relevant
science, Luc Tappy, a researcher at the University of Lausanne in
Switzerland who is considered by biochemists who study fructose to be
the world’s foremost authority on the subject, said there was “not the
single hint” that H.F.C.S. was more deleterious than other sources of
sugar.

The question, then, isn’t whether high-fructose corn syrup is worse
than sugar; it’s what do they do to us, and how do they do it? The
conventional wisdom has long been that the worst that can be said
about sugars of any kind is that they cause tooth decay and represent
“empty calories” that we eat in excess because they taste so good.

By this logic, sugar-sweetened beverages (or H.F.C.S.-sweetened
beverages, as the Sugar Association prefers they are called) are bad
for us not because there’s anything particularly toxic about the sugar
they contain but just because people consume too many of them.

Those organizations that now advise us to cut down on our sugar
consumption — the Department of Agriculture, for instance, in its
recent Dietary Guidelines for Americans, or the American Heart
Association in guidelines released in September 2009 (of which Lustig
was a co-author) — do so for this reason. Refined sugar and H.F.C.S.
don’t come with any protein, vitamins, minerals, antioxidants or
fiber, and so they either displace other more nutritious elements of
our diet or are eaten over and above what we need to sustain our
weight, and this is why we get fatter.

Whether the empty-calories argument is true, it’s certainly
convenient. It allows everyone to assign blame for obesity and, by
extension, diabetes — two conditions so intimately linked that some
authorities have taken to calling them “diabesity” — to overeating of
all foods, or underexercising, because a calorie is a calorie. “This
isn’t about demonizing any industry,” as Michelle Obama said about her
Let’s Move program to combat the epidemic of childhood obesity.
Instead it’s about getting us — or our children — to move more and eat
less, reduce our portion sizes, cut back on snacks.

Lustig’s argument, however, is not about the consumption of empty
calories — and biochemists have made the same case previously, though
not so publicly. It is that sugar has unique characteristics,
specifically in the way the human body metabolizes the fructose in it,
that may make it singularly harmful, at least if consumed in
sufficient quantities.

The phrase Lustig uses when he describes this concept is “isocaloric
but not isometabolic.” This means we can eat 100 calories of glucose
(from a potato or bread or other starch) or 100 calories of sugar
(half glucose and half fructose), and they will be metabolized
differently and have a different effect on the body. The calories are
the same, but the metabolic consequences are quite different.

The fructose component of sugar and H.F.C.S. is metabolized primarily
by the liver, while the glucose from sugar and starches is metabolized
by every cell in the body. Consuming sugar (fructose and glucose)
means more work for the liver than if you consumed the same number of
calories of starch (glucose). And if you take that sugar in liquid
form — soda or fruit juices — the fructose and glucose will hit the
liver more quickly than if you consume them, say, in an apple (or
several apples, to get what researchers would call the equivalent dose
of sugar). The speed with which the liver has to do its work will also
affect how it metabolizes the fructose and glucose.

In animals, or at least in laboratory rats and mice, it’s clear that
if the fructose hits the liver in sufficient quantity and with
sufficient speed, the liver will convert much of it to fat. This
apparently induces a condition known as insulin resistance, which is
now considered the fundamental problem in obesity, and the underlying
defect in heart disease and in the type of diabetes, type 2, that is
common to obese and overweight individuals. It might also be the
underlying defect in many cancers.

If what happens in laboratory rodents also happens in humans, and if
we are eating enough sugar to make it happen, then we are in trouble.

The last time an agency of the federal government looked into the
question of sugar and health in any detail was in 2005, in a report by
the Institute of Medicine, a branch of the National Academies. The
authors of the report acknowledged that plenty of evidence suggested
that sugar could increase the risk of heart disease and diabetes —
even raising LDL cholesterol, known as the “bad cholesterol”—– but did
not consider the research to be definitive. There was enough
ambiguity, they concluded, that they couldn’t even set an upper limit
on how much sugar constitutes too much. Referring back to the 2005
report, an Institute of Medicine report released last fall reiterated,
“There is a lack of scientific agreement about the amount of sugars
that can be consumed in a healthy diet.” This was the same conclusion
that the Food and Drug Administration came to when it last assessed
the sugar question, back in 1986. The F.D.A. report was perceived as
an exoneration of sugar, and that perception influenced the treatment
of sugar in the landmark reports on diet and health that came after.

The Sugar Association and the Corn Refiners Association have also
portrayed the 1986 F.D.A. report as clearing sugar of nutritional
crimes, but what it concluded was actually something else entirely. To
be precise, the F.D.A. reviewers said that other than its contribution
to calories, “no conclusive evidence on sugars demonstrates a hazard
to the general public when sugars are consumed at the levels that are
now current.” This is another way of saying that the evidence by no
means refuted the kinds of claims that Lustig is making now and other
researchers were making then, just that it wasn’t definitive or
unambiguous.

What we have to keep in mind, says Walter Glinsmann, the F.D.A.
administrator who was the primary author on the 1986 report and who
now is an adviser to the Corn Refiners Association, is that sugar and
high-fructose corn syrup might be toxic, as Lustig argues, but so
might any substance if it’s consumed in ways or in quantities that are
unnatural for humans. The question is always at what dose does a
substance go from being harmless to harmful? How much do we have to
consume before this happens?

When Glinsmann and his F.D.A. co-authors decided no conclusive
evidence demonstrated harm at the levels of sugar then being consumed,
they estimated those levels at 40 pounds per person per year beyond
what we might get naturally in fruits and vegetables — 40 pounds per
person per year of “added sugars” as nutritionists now call them. This
is 200 calories per day of sugar, which is less than the amount in a
can and a half of Coca-Cola or two cups of apple juice. If that’s
indeed all we consume, most nutritionists today would be delighted,
including Lustig.

But 40 pounds per year happened to be 35 pounds less than what
Department of Agriculture analysts said we were consuming at the time
— 75 pounds per person per year — and the U.S.D.A. estimates are
typically considered to be the most reliable. By the early 2000s,
according to the U.S.D.A., we had increased our consumption to more
than 90 pounds per person per year.

That this increase happened to coincide with the current epidemics of
obesity and diabetes is one reason that it’s tempting to blame sugars
— sucrose and high-fructose corn syrup — for the problem. In 1980,
roughly one in seven Americans was obese, and almost six million were
diabetic, and the obesity rates, at least, hadn’t changed
significantly in the 20 years previously. By the early 2000s, when
sugar consumption peaked, one in every three Americans was obese, and
14 million were diabetic.

This correlation between sugar consumption and diabetes is what
defense attorneys call circumstantial evidence. It’s more compelling
than it otherwise might be, though, because the last time sugar
consumption jumped markedly in this country, it was also associated
with a diabetes epidemic.

In the early 20th century, many of the leading authorities on diabetes
in North America and Europe (including Frederick Banting, who shared
the 1923 Nobel Prize for the discovery of insulin) suspected that
sugar causes diabetes based on the observation that the disease was
rare in populations that didn’t consume refined sugar and widespread
in those that did. In 1924, Haven Emerson, director of the institute
of public health at Columbia University, reported that diabetes deaths
in New York City had increased as much as 15-fold since the Civil War
years, and that deaths increased as much as fourfold in some U.S.
cities between 1900 and 1920 alone. This coincided, he noted, with an
equally significant increase in sugar consumption — almost doubling
from 1890 to the early 1920s — with the birth and subsequent growth of
the candy and soft-drink industries.

Emerson’s argument was countered by Elliott Joslin, a leading
authority on diabetes, and Joslin won out. But his argument was
fundamentally flawed. Simply put, it went like this: The Japanese eat
lots of rice, and Japanese diabetics are few and far between; rice is
mostly carbohydrate, which suggests that sugar, also a carbohydrate,
does not cause diabetes. But sugar and rice are not identical merely
because they’re both carbohydrates. Joslin could not know at the time
that the fructose content of sugar affects how we metabolize it.

Joslin was also unaware that the Japanese ate little sugar. In the
early 1960s, the Japanese were eating as little sugar as Americans
were a century earlier, maybe less, which means that the Japanese
experience could have been used to support the idea that sugar causes
diabetes. Still, with Joslin arguing in edition after edition of his
seminal textbook that sugar played no role in diabetes, it eventually
took on the aura of undisputed truth.

Until Lustig came along, the last time an academic forcefully put
forward the sugar-as-toxin thesis was in the 1970s, when John Yudkin,
a leading authority on nutrition in the United Kingdom, published a
polemic on sugar called “Sweet and Dangerous.” Through the 1960s
Yudkin did a series of experiments feeding sugar and starch to
rodents, chickens, rabbits, pigs and college students. He found that
the sugar invariably raised blood levels of triglycerides (a technical
term for fat), which was then, as now, considered a risk factor for
heart disease. Sugar also raised insulin levels in Yudkin’s
experiments, which linked sugar directly to type 2 diabetes. Few in
the medical community took Yudkin’s ideas seriously, largely because
he was also arguing that dietary fat and saturated fat were harmless.
This set Yudkin’s sugar hypothesis directly against the growing
acceptance of the idea, prominent to this day, that dietary fat was
the cause of heart disease, a notion championed by the University of
Minnesota nutritionist Ancel Keys.

A common assumption at the time was that if one hypothesis was right,
then the other was most likely wrong. Either fat caused heart disease
by raising cholesterol, or sugar did by raising triglycerides. “The
theory that diets high in sugar are an important cause of
atherosclerosis and heart disease does not have wide support among
experts in the field, who say that fats and cholesterol are the more
likely culprits,” as Jane E. Brody wrote in The Times in 1977.

At the time, many of the key observations cited to argue that dietary
fat caused heart disease actually support the sugar theory as well.
During the Korean War, pathologists doing autopsies on American
soldiers killed in battle noticed that many had significant plaques in
their arteries, even those who were still teenagers, while the Koreans
killed in battle did not. The atherosclerotic plaques in the Americans
were attributed to the fact that they ate high-fat diets and the
Koreans ate low-fat. But the Americans were also eating high-sugar
diets, while the Koreans, like the Japanese, were not.

In 1970, Keys published the results of a landmark study in nutrition
known as the Seven Countries Study. Its results were perceived by the
medical community and the wider public as compelling evidence that
saturated-fat consumption is the best dietary predictor of heart
disease. But sugar consumption in the seven countries studied was
almost equally predictive. So it was possible that Yudkin was right,
and Keys was wrong, or that they could both be right. The evidence has
always been able to go either way.

European clinicians tended to side with Yudkin; Americans with Keys.
The situation wasn’t helped, as one of Yudkin’s colleagues later told
me, by the fact that “there was quite a bit of loathing” between the
two nutritionists themselves. In 1971, Keys published an article
attacking Yudkin and describing his evidence against sugar as “flimsy
indeed.” He treated Yudkin as a figure of scorn, and Yudkin never
managed to shake the portrayal.

By the end of the 1970s, any scientist who studied the potentially
deleterious effects of sugar in the diet, according to Sheldon Reiser,
who did just that at the U.S.D.A.’s Carbohydrate Nutrition Laboratory
in Beltsville, Md., and talked about it publicly, was endangering his
reputation. “Yudkin was so discredited,” Reiser said to me. “He was
ridiculed in a way. And anybody else who said something bad about
sucrose, they’d say, ‘He’s just like Yudkin.’ ”

What has changed since then, other than Americans getting fatter and
more diabetic? It wasn’t so much that researchers learned anything
particularly new about the effects of sugar or high-fructose corn
syrup in the human body. Rather the context of the science changed:
physicians and medical authorities came to accept the idea that a
condition known as metabolic syndrome is a major, if not the major,
risk factor for heart disease and diabetes. The Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention now estimate that some 75 million Americans
have metabolic syndrome. For those who have heart attacks, metabolic
syndrome will very likely be the reason.

The first symptom doctors are told to look for in diagnosing metabolic
syndrome is an expanding waistline. This means that if you’re
overweight, there’s a good chance you have metabolic syndrome, and
this is why you’re more likely to have a heart attack or become
diabetic (or both) than someone who’s not. Although lean individuals,
too, can have metabolic syndrome, and they are at greater risk of
heart disease and diabetes than lean individuals without it.

Having metabolic syndrome is another way of saying that the cells in
your body are actively ignoring the action of the hormone insulin — a
condition known technically as being insulin-resistant. Because
insulin resistance and metabolic syndrome still get remarkably little
attention in the press (certainly compared with cholesterol), let me
explain the basics.

You secrete insulin in response to the foods you eat — particularly
the carbohydrates — to keep blood sugar in control after a meal. When
your cells are resistant to insulin, your body (your pancreas, to be
precise) responds to rising blood sugar by pumping out more and more
insulin. Eventually the pancreas can no longer keep up with the demand
or it gives in to what diabetologists call “pancreatic exhaustion.”
Now your blood sugar will rise out of control, and you’ve got
diabetes.

Not everyone with insulin resistance becomes diabetic; some continue
to secrete enough insulin to overcome their cells’ resistance to the
hormone. But having chronically elevated insulin levels has harmful
effects of its own — heart disease, for one. A result is higher
triglyceride levels and blood pressure, lower levels of HDL
cholesterol (the “good cholesterol”), further worsening the insulin
resistance — this is metabolic syndrome.

When physicians assess your risk of heart disease these days, they
will take into consideration your LDL cholesterol (the bad kind), but
also these symptoms of metabolic syndrome. The idea, according to
Scott Grundy, a University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center
nutritionist and the chairman of the panel that produced the last
edition of the National Cholesterol Education Program guidelines, is
that heart attacks 50 years ago might have been caused by high
cholesterol — particularly high LDL cholesterol — but since then we’ve
all gotten fatter and more diabetic, and now it’s metabolic syndrome
that’s the more conspicuous problem.

This raises two obvious questions. The first is what sets off
metabolic syndrome to begin with, which is another way of asking, What
causes the initial insulin resistance? There are several hypotheses,
but researchers who study the mechanisms of insulin resistance now
think that a likely cause is the accumulation of fat in the liver.
When studies have been done trying to answer this question in humans,
says Varman Samuel, who studies insulin resistance at Yale School of
Medicine, the correlation between liver fat and insulin resistance in
patients, lean or obese, is “remarkably strong.” What it looks like,
Samuel says, is that “when you deposit fat in the liver, that’s when
you become insulin-resistant.”

That raises the other obvious question: What causes the liver to
accumulate fat in humans? A common assumption is that simply getting
fatter leads to a fatty liver, but this does not explain fatty liver
in lean people. Some of it could be attributed to genetic
predisposition. But harking back to Lustig, there’s also the very real
possibility that it is caused by sugar.

As it happens, metabolic syndrome and insulin resistance are the
reasons that many of the researchers today studying fructose became
interested in the subject to begin with. If you want to cause insulin
resistance in laboratory rats, says Gerald Reaven, the Stanford
University diabetologist who did much of the pioneering work on the
subject, feeding them diets that are mostly fructose is an easy way to
do it. It’s a “very obvious, very dramatic” effect, Reaven says.

By the early 2000s, researchers studying fructose metabolism had
established certain findings unambiguously and had well-established
biochemical explanations for what was happening. Feed animals enough
pure fructose or enough sugar, and their livers convert the fructose
into fat — the saturated fatty acid, palmitate, to be precise, that
supposedly gives us heart disease when we eat it, by raising LDL
cholesterol. The fat accumulates in the liver, and insulin resistance
and metabolic syndrome follow.

Michael Pagliassotti, a Colorado State University biochemist who did
many of the relevant animal studies in the late 1990s, says these
changes can happen in as little as a week if the animals are fed sugar
or fructose in huge amounts — 60 or 70 percent of the calories in
their diets. They can take several months if the animals are fed
something closer to what humans (in America) actually consume — around
20 percent of the calories in their diet. Stop feeding them the sugar,
in either case, and the fatty liver promptly goes away, and with it
the insulin resistance.

Similar effects can be shown in humans, although the researchers doing
this work typically did the studies with only fructose — as Luc Tappy
did in Switzerland or Peter Havel and Kimber Stanhope did at the
University of California, Davis — and pure fructose is not the same
thing as sugar or high-fructose corn syrup. When Tappy fed his human
subjects the equivalent of the fructose in 8 to 10 cans of Coke or
Pepsi a day — a “pretty high dose,” he says —– their livers would
start to become insulin-resistant, and their triglycerides would go up
in just a few days. With lower doses, Tappy says, just as in the
animal research, the same effects would appear, but it would take
longer, a month or more.

Despite the steady accumulation of research, the evidence can still be
criticized as falling far short of conclusive. The studies in rodents
aren’t necessarily applicable to humans. And the kinds of studies that
Tappy, Havel and Stanhope did — having real people drink beverages
sweetened with fructose and comparing the effect with what happens
when the same people or others drink beverages sweetened with glucose
— aren’t applicable to real human experience, because we never
naturally consume pure fructose. We always take it with glucose, in
the nearly 50-50 combinations of sugar or high-fructose corn syrup.
And then the amount of fructose or sucrose being fed in these studies,
to the rodents or the human subjects, has typically been enormous.

This is why the research reviews on the subject invariably conclude
that more research is necessary to establish at what dose sugar and
high-fructose corn syrup start becoming what Lustig calls toxic.
“There is clearly a need for intervention studies,” as Tappy recently
phrased it in the technical jargon of the field, “in which the
fructose intake of high-fructose consumers is reduced to better
delineate the possible pathogenic role of fructose. At present,
short-term-intervention studies, however, suggest that a high-fructose
intake consisting of soft drinks, sweetened juices or bakery products
can increase the risk of metabolic and cardiovascular diseases.”

In simpler language, how much of this stuff do we have to eat or
drink, and for how long, before it does to us what it does to
laboratory rats? And is that amount more than we’re already consuming?

Unfortunately, we’re unlikely to learn anything conclusive in the near
future. As Lustig points out, sugar and high-fructose corn syrup are
certainly not “acute toxins” of the kind the F.D.A. typically
regulates and the effects of which can be studied over the course of
days or months. The question is whether they’re “chronic toxins,”
which means “not toxic after one meal, but after 1,000 meals.” This
means that what Tappy calls “intervention studies” have to go on for
significantly longer than 1,000 meals to be meaningful.

At the moment, the National Institutes of Health are supporting
surprisingly few clinical trials related to sugar and high-fructose
corn syrup in the U.S. All are small, and none will last more than a
few months. Lustig and his colleagues at U.C.S.F. — including
Jean-Marc Schwarz, whom Tappy describes as one of the three best
fructose biochemists in the world — are doing one of these studies. It
will look at what happens when obese teenagers consume no sugar other
than what they might get in fruits and vegetables. Another study will
do the same with pregnant women to see if their babies are born
healthier and leaner.

Only one study in this country, by Havel and Stanhope at the
University of California, Davis, is directly addressing the question
of how much sugar is required to trigger the symptoms of insulin
resistance and metabolic syndrome. Havel and Stanhope are having
healthy people drink three sugar- or H.F.C.S.-sweetened beverages a
day and then seeing what happens. The catch is that their study
subjects go through this three-beverage-a-day routine for only two
weeks. That doesn’t seem like a very long time — only 42 meals, not
1,000 — but Havel and Stanhope have been studying fructose since the
mid-1990s, and they seem confident that two weeks is sufficient to see
if these sugars cause at least some of the symptoms of metabolic
syndrome.

So the answer to the question of whether sugar is as bad as Lustig
claims is that it certainly could be. It very well may be true that
sugar and high-fructose corn syrup, because of the unique way in which
we metabolize fructose and at the levels we now consume it, cause fat
to accumulate in our livers followed by insulin resistance and
metabolic syndrome, and so trigger the process that leads to heart
disease, diabetes and obesity. They could indeed be toxic, but they
take years to do their damage. It doesn’t happen overnight. Until
long-term studies are done, we won’t know for sure.

One more question still needs to be asked, and this is what my wife,
who has had to live with my journalistic obsession on this subject,
calls the Grinch-trying-to-steal-Christmas problem. What are the
chances that sugar is actually worse than Lustig says it is?

One of the diseases that increases in incidence with obesity, diabetes
and metabolic syndrome is cancer. This is why I said earlier that
insulin resistance may be a fundamental underlying defect in many
cancers, as it is in type 2 diabetes and heart disease. The connection
between obesity, diabetes and cancer was first reported in 2004 in
large population studies by researchers from the World Health
Organization’s International Agency for Research on Cancer. It is not
controversial. What it means is that you are more likely to get cancer
if you’re obese or diabetic than if you’re not, and you’re more likely
to get cancer if you have metabolic syndrome than if you don’t.

This goes along with two other observations that have led to the
well-accepted idea that some large percentage of cancers are caused by
our Western diets and lifestyles. This means they could actually be
prevented if we could pinpoint exactly what the problem is and prevent
or avoid that.

One observation is that death rates from cancer, like those from
diabetes, increased significantly in the second half of the 19th
century and the early decades of the 20th. As with diabetes, this
observation was accompanied by a vigorous debate about whether those
increases could be explained solely by the aging of the population and
the use of new diagnostic techniques or whether it was really the
incidence of cancer itself that was increasing. “By the 1930s,” as a
1997 report by the World Cancer Research Fund International and the
American Institute for Cancer Research explained, “it was apparent
that age-adjusted death rates from cancer were rising in the U.S.A.,”
which meant that the likelihood of any particular 60-year-old, for
instance, dying from cancer was increasing, even if there were indeed
more 60-years-olds with each passing year.

The second observation was that malignant cancer, like diabetes, was a
relatively rare disease in populations that didn’t eat Western diets,
and in some of these populations it appeared to be virtually
nonexistent. In the 1950s, malignant cancer among the Inuit, for
instance, was still deemed sufficiently rare that physicians working
in northern Canada would publish case reports in medical journals when
they did diagnose a case.

In 1984, Canadian physicians published an analysis of 30 years of
cancer incidence among Inuit in the western and central Arctic. While
there had been a “striking increase in the incidence of cancers of
modern societies” including lung and cervical cancer, they reported,
there were still “conspicuous deficits” in breast-cancer rates. They
could not find a single case in an Inuit patient before 1966; they
could find only two cases between 1967 and 1980. Since then, as their
diet became more like ours, breast cancer incidence has steadily
increased among the Inuit, although it’s still significantly lower
than it is in other North American ethnic groups. Diabetes rates in
the Inuit have also gone from vanishingly low in the mid-20th century
to high today.

Now most researchers will agree that the link between Western diet or
lifestyle and cancer manifests itself through this association with
obesity, diabetes and metabolic syndrome — i.e., insulin resistance.
This was the conclusion, for instance, of a 2007 report published by
the World Cancer Research Fund and the American Institute for Cancer
Research — “Food, Nutrition, Physical Activity and the Prevention of
Cancer.”

So how does it work? Cancer researchers now consider that the problem
with insulin resistance is that it leads us to secrete more insulin,
and insulin (as well as a related hormone known as insulin-like growth
factor) actually promotes tumor growth.

As it was explained to me by Craig Thompson, who has done much of this
research and is now president of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Center in New York, the cells of many human cancers come to depend on
insulin to provide the fuel (blood sugar) and materials they need to
grow and multiply. Insulin and insulin-like growth factor (and related
growth factors) also provide the signal, in effect, to do it. The more
insulin, the better they do. Some cancers develop mutations that serve
the purpose of increasing the influence of insulin on the cell; others
take advantage of the elevated insulin levels that are common to
metabolic syndrome, obesity and type 2 diabetes. Some do both.
Thompson believes that many pre-cancerous cells would never acquire
the mutations that turn them into malignant tumors if they weren’t
being driven by insulin to take up more and more blood sugar and
metabolize it.

What these researchers call elevated insulin (or insulin-like growth
factor) signaling appears to be a necessary step in many human
cancers, particularly cancers like breast and colon cancer. Lewis
Cantley, director of the Cancer Center at Beth Israel Deaconess
Medical Center at Harvard Medical School, says that up to 80 percent
of all human cancers are driven by either mutations or environmental
factors that work to enhance or mimic the effect of insulin on the
incipient tumor cells. Cantley is now the leader of one of five
scientific “dream teams,” financed by a national coalition called
Stand Up to Cancer, to study, in the case of Cantley’s team, precisely
this link between a specific insulin-signaling gene (known technically
as PI3K) and tumor development in breast and other cancers common to
women.

Most of the researchers studying this insulin/cancer link seem
concerned primarily with finding a drug that might work to suppress
insulin signaling in incipient cancer cells and so, they hope, inhibit
or prevent their growth entirely. Many of the experts writing about
the insulin/cancer link from a public health perspective — as in the
2007 report from the World Cancer Research Fund and the American
Institute for Cancer Research — work from the assumption that
chronically elevated insulin levels and insulin resistance are both
caused by being fat or by getting fatter. They recommend, as the 2007
report did, that we should all work to be lean and more physically
active, and that in turn will help us prevent cancer.

But some researchers will make the case, as Cantley and Thompson do,
that if something other than just being fatter is causing insulin
resistance to begin with, that’s quite likely the dietary cause of
many cancers. If it’s sugar that causes insulin resistance, they say,
then the conclusion is hard to avoid that sugar causes cancer — some
cancers, at least — radical as this may seem and despite the fact that
this suggestion has rarely if ever been voiced before publicly. For
just this reason, neither of these men will eat sugar or high-fructose
corn syrup, if they can avoid it.

“I have eliminated refined sugar from my diet and eat as little as I
possibly can,” Thompson told me, “because I believe ultimately it’s
something I can do to decrease my risk of cancer.” Cantley put it this
way: “Sugar scares me.”

Sugar scares me too, obviously. I’d like to eat it in moderation. I’d
certainly like my two sons to be able to eat it in moderation, to not
overconsume it, but I don’t actually know what that means, and I’ve
been reporting on this subject and studying it for more than a decade.
If sugar just makes us fatter, that’s one thing. We start gaining
weight, we eat less of it. But we are also talking about things we
can’t see — fatty liver, insulin resistance and all that follows.
Officially I’m not supposed to worry because the evidence isn’t
conclusive, but I do.

Gary Taubes (gatau...@gmail.com) is a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
independent investigator in health policy and the author of “Why We
Get Fat.” Editor: Vera Titunik (v.titunik-maggr...@nytimes.com).



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((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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