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    Latest News - Food and Drink

    Markers in blood and urine may reveal how much ultra-processed food we are eating

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    By News Desk on May 23, 2025 Food and Drink, USA News
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    Cliff Notes – Markers in blood and urine may reveal how much ultra-processed food we are eating

    • A new study has identified biological markers in blood and urine that can indicate the intake of ultra-processed foods, which constitute nearly 60% of the American diet.
    • This research, led by Erikka Loftfield from the National Cancer Institute, offers a more objective measure of dietary consumption compared to traditional recall-based methods, which are often inaccurate.
    • The findings suggest a connection between high ultra-processed food consumption and health risks, including type 2 diabetes, and highlight the need for further research to explore the biological pathways involved.

    Markers in blood and urine may reveal how much ultra-processed food we are eating

    Potato chips are displayed in pharmacy Duane Reade by Walgreens, Thursday, March 25, 2021, in New York. Walgreens reports earnings March 31, 2021. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, file)

    Molecules in blood and urine may reveal how much energy a person consumes from ultra-processed foods, a key step to understanding the impact of the products that make up nearly 60% of the American diet, a new study finds.

    It’s the first time that scientists have identified biological markers that can indicate higher or lower intake of the foods, which are linked to a host of health problems, said Erikka Loftfield, a National Cancer Institute researcher who led the study published Tuesday in the journal PLOS Medicine.

    “It can potentially give us some clues as to what the underlying biology might be between an ultra-processed food association and a health outcome,” Loftfield said.

    Ultra-processed foods – sugary cereals, sodas, chips, frozen pizzas and more – are products created through industrial processes with ingredients such as additives, colours and preservatives not found in home kitchens. They’re ubiquitous in the U.S. and elsewhere, but studying their health impacts is hard because it’s difficult to accurately track what people eat.

    Typical nutrition studies rely on recall: asking people what they ate during a certain period. But such reports are notoriously unreliable because people don’t remember everything they ate, or they record it inaccurately.

    “There’s a need for both a more objective measure and potentially also a more accurate measure,” Loftfield explained.

    To create the new scores, Loftfield and her colleagues examined data from an existing study of more than 1,000 older U.S. adults who were AARP members. More than 700 of them had provided blood and urine samples, as well as detailed dietary recall reports, collected over a year.

    The scientists found that hundreds of metabolites – products of digestion and other processes – corresponded to the percentage of energy a person consumes from ultra-processed foods. From those, they devised a score of 28 blood markers and up to 33 urine markers that reliably predicted ultra-processed food intake in people consuming typical diets.

    “We found this signature that was sort of predictive of this dietary pattern that’s high in ultraprocessed food and not just a specific food item here and there,” she said.

    A few of the markers, notably two amino acids and a carbohydrate, showed up at least 60 times out of 100 testing iterations. One marker showed a potential link between a diet high in ultra-processed foods and type 2 diabetes, the study found.

    To confirm the findings, Loftfield measured the scoring tool with participants in a carefully controlled 2019 National Institutes of Health study of ultra-processed foods.

    In that study, 20 adults went to live for a month at an NIH centre. They received diets of ultra-processed and unprocessed foods matched for calories, sugar, fat, fibre and macronutrients for two weeks each and were told to eat as much as they liked.

    Loftfield’s team found that they could use the metabolite scores to tell when the individual participants were eating a lot of ultra-processed foods and when they weren’t eating those foods.

    The results suggested the markers were “valid at the individual level,” Loftfield said.

    It’s still early research, but identifying blood and urine markers to predict ultra-processed food consumption is “a major scientific advance,” said Dr. Dariush Mozaffarian, director of the Food Is Medicine Institute at Tufts University, who was not involved in the study.

    “With more research, these metabolic signatures can begin to untangle the biological pathways and harms of UPF and also differences in health effects of specific UPF food groups, processing methods and additives,” he said.

    Loftfield said she hopes to apply the tool to existing studies where blood and urine samples are available to track, for instance, the effect of consuming ultra-processed foods on cancer risk.

    At a time when support for government research is being cut, funding remains uncertain.

    “There’s a lot of interest across the board — scientifically, public interest, political interest — in the question of: Does ultra-processed food impact health and, if so, how?” she said. “How can we fund the studies that need to be done to answer these questions in a timely way?”

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