GoodHealthMD.com
Dairy Consumption and Weight Loss Claims
T. Colin Campbell, Ph. D.
On June 28, 2005, the Physician's Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM)
invited me to present my views on dairy and health at their news conference
announcing their lawsuit against several leading dairy industries that were
making false claims about the alleged ability of cow's milk consumption to
reduce obesity in children. PCRM staff presented their position paper and
Dr. Amy Lanou, Nutrition Director, summarized the principal scientific
evidence supporting their lawsuit. Because Dr. Lanou's summary was well
stated, I chose to present two additional ideas, including (1) the broader
effects of dairy on other health outcomes and (2) the frightening influence
of the dairy industry on the diet and health research and policy
communities.
I prepared the following comments only to guide my own thinking; this was
not distributed to anyone else at the conference. Although the PCRM did a
superb job in organizing the conference and presenting their evidence, I was
(once again) reminded of the shallowness of media interest in diet and
health matters. Most of the questions asked by the reporters were concerned
with issues that I considered non-substantive: how PCRM obtained their
information, who funded them, etc. I was disappointed that virtually no
questions went to the supporting evidence on the health effects of dairy,
either on obesity or on other health outcomes. So, here are my 'background
comments' (all squeezed, ad lib, into about 5 minutes).
There are few if any health topics that are more contentious and personally
sensitive than the question of the health benefits and risks of cow's milk
and its products. Objective design of research studies and rational
interpretation of the evidence are secondary to personal agendas,
professional biases and marketplace forces. Thus, I need to explain my own
background.
I was raised on a dairy farm milking cows until my graduate student days in
nutrition at Cornell University. For my doctoral research I investigated, in
effect, how to make the production of milk, meat and especially animal
protein more efficient. Later, it was on to Virginia Tech's Department of
Biochemistry and Nutrition and my coordination of a State Department funded
project designed to organize a nationwide program of improving the health of
malnourished children in the Philippines, especially to insure a good source
of protein, preferably 'high quality' animal based protein.
But I was greeted with a surprise. The few people who were consuming
protein-rich diets were more susceptible to primary liver cancer. At about
this same time, an experimental animal (rat) study from India showed the
same effect. My associates and I then embarked on a basic research program
to investigate this surprising effect of protein feeding on cancer
development. Supported entirely by public money--mostly from NIH--we
explored in depth over the next 27 years various characteristics of this
association. We needed to confirm this observation then determine how it
worked. We did both. The results were profoundly convincing and, along the
way, they illustrated several fundamental nutrition and cancer principles.
Tumor growth could be alternately turned on and off by feeding diets
containing higher and lower levels of dietary protein, respectively
Dietary protein promoted tumor growth but only at dietary levels above that
needed for good health (ca. 10% of total energy)
Although dietary protein did not initiate cancer, it enhanced initiation
and, more importantly, promoted tumor growth
The protein effect could be explained by multiple biochemical mechanisms,
appearing to act in synergy
The dietary protein having this tumor promoting effect was casein, the
principle protein of cow's milk. Two plant-based proteins, soy and wheat,
did not promote tumor growth--even at the higher level--unless supplemented,
possibly, with their respective 'limiting' amino acids
The casein effect on tumor growth very likely extends to other animal
proteins as well
Based on the criteria used by the government's program for determining
whether chemicals are carcinogenic, casein is very likely the most relevant
chemical carcinogen we consume
However, I question studies that are focused on single agents and single
events because they are usually missing the larger context. Thus, we sought
that larger context within which casein, perhaps animal protein in general,
relates to human health. An opportunity arose for us to conduct such a study
among human subjects in rural China where various cancers were
geographically localized and where diets contained relatively small but
varied amounts of animal based foods. In seeking this larger context in this
nationwide study, we learned.from multiple perspectives.that relatively
small amounts of animal based foods (and/or the lack of whole plant based
foods) nutritionally conspire to cause degenerative diseases like cancer,
cardiovascular and other diseases commonly found in the United States and
other highly industrialized countries.
This years-long experimental research experience.from the laboratory to the
human studies.was combined with my co-authorship of several expert panel
reports on significant diet and health issues. These experiences eventually
led me to a view about diet and nutrition that is substantially different
from that which I began my research career, especially in respect to my
personal and professional love affair with cow's milk and its products.
On the question of the association of cow's milk with obesity, I agree with
the excellent review prepared by Dr. Amy Lanou and the petition presented by
the Physician's Committee for Responsible Medicine. I have little further to
add.
However, I wish to pose a related, perhaps even more significant, issue.
Even if we were to accept the hypothesis that dairy reduces obesity (which I
do not), it would be an effect that is inconsistent with the numerous other
adverse effects promoted by this food. I arrive at this conclusion both
because of research findings from my own laboratory and from the
publications of many other researchers, some evidence of which is decades
old.
Each of these adverse effects is based on studies representing a variety of
evidence, some of which shows how dairy food produces these effects. These
adverse effects include serious outcomes like increased blood cholesterol
and its companion, atherosclerosis, increased cancer development, increased
insulin dependent type I diabetes, and increased risk for osteoporosis. Then
there are the less life threatening but nonetheless nettlesome problems like
lactose intolerance and intestinal distress, teenage acne, migraine
headaches, kidney stones and cataracts.
Especially remarkable, in my view, are the multiple but highly integrated
biochemical mechanisms that underlie most or even all of these effects. They
include the increased activity of growth factors and compensatory cell
replication, metabolic acidosis and its impact on key enzyme reactions,
hormonal imbalances, and adverse effects on immune system components. Many
of these reactions are shared by other animal-based foods although some may
be more specific for dairy, per se.
More troublesome, however, is the way in which most of this exceptionally
compelling evidence has been hidden from public view and, further, the way
in which research findings favoring dairy consumption is so often funded by
the dairy industry. It has become more difficult these days to know which
scientists are conflicted and which are not. When legal proceedings are
required to reveal such conflicts, something is tragically wrong with our
scientific research enterprise.
Even more fundamentally, I question the basic assumptions that are used to
construct research studies themselves. Too often, we rely on narrowly
focused hypotheses that are concerned with specific outcomes and specific
events. These findings represent short-term and un-sustained responses that
ignore the larger context. This highly reductionist research is not
consistent with the concept of nutrition; it is more akin to pharmacology.
Largely using reductionist and specious research rationale, industry
interests have corrupted, in my opinion, the scientific research enterprise
at a most fundamental level. During my career, I have observed a trend
toward more, not less of this industry interference. We know well industry's
motivation; they must make money for their shareholders and this is part of
our system. But more troubling is the relatively hidden activity of a few
academic charlatans with industry ties who participate in and even organize
policy development activities. Invited to chair these policy committees,
they also help to select committee members and to set agendas for
discussion. This must be changed. At a minimum, individuals with such close
ties to industry, either personally or professionally, should be barred from
chairing and organizing so-called expert panels. It would be far more
preferable to choose other professionals.even from outside of the food and
nutrition communities.to chair these panels.
In conclusion, I therefore suggest that, although the dairy industry claims
that milk consumption reduces obesity are excessive and unwarranted, we must
not lose sight of the even larger context surrounding this food. It is well
past time that serious discussion be given to all of the adverse.and
biologically interconnected.effects of this food.