Of the 17 preservatives studied individually, higher consumption of 12 of them was associated with an increased risk of type 2 diabetes: widely used non-antioxidant food preservatives (potassium sorbate (E202), potassium metabisulphite (E224), sodium nitrite (E250), acetic acid (E260), sodium acetates (E262) and calcium propionate (E282)) and antioxidant additives (sodium ascorbate (E301), alpha-tocopherol (E307), sodium erythorbate (E316), citric acid (E330), phosphoric acid (E338) and rosemary extracts (E392)).
Preservatives belong to the family of food additives and are widely used by the food industry worldwide. Of the three and a half million foods and beverages listed in the Open Food Facts World database in 2024, more than 700,000 contain at least one of these substances.
Additives with preservative properties have been grouped into two categories in the work carried out by Inserm researchers: non-antioxidants (which inhibit microbial growth or slow down the chemical changes that lead to food spoilage) and antioxidants (which delay or prevent food spoilage by eliminating or limiting oxygen levels in packaging). On packaging, they generally correspond to European codes between E200 and E299 (for preservatives in the strict sense) and between E300 and E399 (for antioxidant additives).
Experimental studies have suggested that certain preservatives may damage cells and DNA and have adverse effects on metabolism, but the links between these additives and type 2 diabetes remain to be established.
A research team led by Mathilde Touvier, Inserm Research Director, set out to examine the links between exposure to these preservatives and type 2 diabetes. The team drew on data provided by more than 100,000 French adults participating in the NutriNet-Santé study.
Between 2009 and 2023, the volunteers reported their medical history, socio-demographic data, physical activity habits, and information about their lifestyle and health status. They also regularly provided detailed information on their food consumption by sending scientists complete records covering several 24-hour periods, including the names and brands of the industrial products they consumed. This information, cross-referenced with several databases (Open Food Facts, Oqali, EFSA) and combined with measurements of additives in food and beverages, made it possible to assess the participants' exposure to additives, particularly preservatives, over the course of the study.
Beyond the total amounts of preservatives (58 detected in total in the participants' food records; 33 preservatives in the strict sense and 27 antioxidant additives), 17 substances were analysed individually in relation to the pathology studied. The 17 preservatives are those consumed by at least 10% of the cohort participants.
The analyses took into account the socio-demographic profiles of the participants, their tobacco and alcohol consumption, the nutritional quality of their diet (calories, sugar, salt, saturated fats, fibre, etc.) and many other factors that could have biased the associations studied.
Between 2009 and 2023, 1,131 cases of type 2 diabetes were identified among the 108,723 participants in this study.
Higher consumption of preservative additives overall, non-antioxidant preservatives and antioxidant additives was associated with an increased incidence of type 2 diabetes, by 47%, 49% and 40% respectively, compared to the lowest levels of consumption.
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