Drinking one or more cans of sugary soft drinks a day is linked to an increased risk of diabetes in later life, a study suggests.
People should consume fewer
sugar-sweetened soft drinks, say European scientists.
The report in the journal Diabetologia
mirrors previous US findings.
A diabetes charity recommends limiting
sugary foods and drinks as they are calorific and can cause weight
gain.
The latest research was carried out in
the UK, Germany, Denmark, Italy, Spain, Sweden, France and the
Netherlands.
Some 350,000 individuals were questioned
about their diet, as part of a large European study looking at links
between diet and cancer.
"The consumption of sugar sweetened
soft drinks increases your risk of diabetes - so for every can of
soft drinks that you drink per day, the risk is higher," lead
researcher Dora Romaguera from Imperial College London told BBC News.
She called for clearer public health
information on the effects of sugary soft drinks.
"Given
the increase in sweet beverage consumption in Europe, clear messages
on its deleterious effect on health should be given to the
population," Dr Romaguera and colleagues conclude in their
research paper.
'Not definitive evidence'
An increased risk of diabetes was also
linked to drinking artificially sweetened soft drinks, but this
disappeared when body mass index was taken into account.
Fruit juice consumption was not
associated with diabetes incidence, however.
Commenting on the results, Dr Matthew
Hobbs, head of research at Diabetes UK, said the link between
sugar-sweetened soft drinks and Type-2 diabetes persisted even when
body mass index was taken into account.
This suggests the increased risk is not
solely due to extra calories, he said.
"Even so, it is not definitive
evidence that sugar-sweetened soft drinks increase the risk of Type 2
diabetes, other than through their effect on body weight," he
added.
"We do, though, already recommend
limiting consumption of sugary foods and drinks as these are usually
high in calories and so can lead to weight gain if you have too many
of them.
"This is important for Type 2
diabetes because we know that maintaining a healthy weight is the
single most important thing you can do to prevent it."
Statistics expert Professor Patrick
Wolfe, from University College London, said the absolute risk of
Type-2 diabetes is low at about 4% of the adult UK population.
"In and of themselves, sugary soft
drinks are only part of the picture - they're just one of the
potential risk factors for Type-2 diabetes," he said.
"But since they are one we can
easily eliminate - by switching to diet soft drinks or, even better,
cutting them out of our diets altogether - it makes good sense to do
so."
Gavin Partington, director general of
the drinks industry body the British Soft Drinks Association said:
"Soft drinks are safe to consume but, like all other food and
drink, should be consumed in moderation as part of a balanced diet."
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