Split-image illustration of Mediterranean vs low-fat vegan meals with scale showing greater vegan weight loss from trial study.
Split-image illustration of Mediterranean vs low-fat vegan meals with scale showing greater vegan weight loss from trial study.
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Low-Fat Vegan Diet Linked to Greater Weight Loss Than Mediterranean Pattern in Trial Analysis

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A secondary analysis of a randomized clinical trial reports that a low-fat vegan diet was associated with greater weight loss than a Mediterranean diet, even when the vegan menu included plant foods such as refined grains and potatoes that are labeled “unhealthful” in a common plant-based diet scoring system. The benefits were linked to replacing animal products with plant foods and limiting added oils and nuts, according to researchers from the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine in a study published in Frontiers in Nutrition.

The new report builds on a randomized crossover trial involving 62 overweight adults, conducted by the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine and colleagues. Participants followed both a low-fat vegan diet and a Mediterranean diet for 16 weeks each, in random order, separated by a four-week washout period, according to the original trial and the new analysis published in Frontiers in Nutrition.

The low-fat vegan diet emphasized fruits, vegetables, grains, and legumes. The Mediterranean diet emphasized fruits, vegetables, legumes, fish, low-fat dairy products, and extra-virgin olive oil. No formal calorie limits were imposed on either diet, according to the trial protocol.

In the original crossover trial, the low-fat vegan diet led to greater reductions in body weight and body fat and improved insulin sensitivity and cholesterol levels compared with the Mediterranean diet, while weight remained essentially unchanged on the Mediterranean diet.

The new analysis examined participants’ three-day dietary records using three related scores from the plant-based diet index (PDI):

  • the overall PDI, which increases with higher intake of plant foods overall;
  • the healthful PDI (hPDI), which increases with more "healthful" plant foods (such as fruits, vegetables, whole grains, nuts, legumes, oils, coffee, and tea) and fewer "unhealthful" plant foods (such as fruit juice, sugar-sweetened beverages, refined grains, potatoes, and sweets);
  • and the unhealthful PDI (uPDI), which increases with greater intake of "unhealthful" plant foods and lower intake of "healthful" plant foods.

According to the Frontiers in Nutrition paper, PDI scores rose significantly when participants followed the low-fat vegan diet but did not change on the Mediterranean diet. The hPDI score increased on both diets, with a trend toward a larger increase on the vegan pattern, while the uPDI score increased on the vegan diet and decreased on the Mediterranean diet.

Only the increases in PDI and uPDI—changes seen exclusively on the low-fat vegan diet—were linked to weight loss across the first 16 weeks of the trial. The rise in hPDI scores, which occurred with both diets, was not associated with changes in body weight.

The researchers report that most of the increase in PDI, hPDI, and uPDI scores on the vegan diet came from avoiding animal products. Reducing intake of added oils and nuts on the low-fat vegan diet also contributed to higher uPDI scores, since the index classifies these foods as "healthful" plant-based items.

"Our research shows that even when a low-fat vegan diet includes so-called unhealthy plant-based foods—as defined by the plant-based diet index—like refined grains and potatoes, it's better than the Mediterranean diet for weight loss, because it avoids animal products and added oils," said lead author Hana Kahleova, MD, PhD, director of clinical research at the Physicians Committee, in a news release from the organization.

Taken together, the findings suggest that, in this randomized crossover study of adults with excess weight, replacing animal products with plant-based foods—even those categorized as "unhealthful" by the plant-based diet index—and cutting back on added oils and nuts were associated with greater weight loss on a low-fat vegan diet than on a Mediterranean diet.

사람들이 말하는 것

Reactions on X to the PCRM study are mixed but lean skeptical; critics highlight 42% lean mass loss on the low-fat vegan diet from the original trial, potential biases from vegan advocacy group, small sample size, and unadjusted calorie intake. Some neutrally note the interesting superiority of vegan over Mediterranean diet even including refined grains and potatoes, while others celebrate plant-based benefits.

관련 기사

Illustration of diverse adults enjoying a Mediterranean plant-based meal, linked to lower constipation risk in large U.S. study.
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Large U.S. study links Mediterranean, plant-based diets to lower constipation risk

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A long-term study of more than 96,000 middle- and older-aged adults found that Mediterranean-style and plant-based eating patterns were associated with a lower risk of developing chronic constipation, even after accounting for fiber intake. Diets characterized as Western or pro-inflammatory were linked to a higher risk, while low-carbohydrate diets showed little effect.

A low-fat vegan diet has shown promise in helping people with type 1 diabetes cut their daily insulin needs by nearly 30%, according to new research. The study, published in BMC Nutrition, found that participants on this plant-based plan also saved on insulin costs without restricting calories or carbohydrates. In contrast, those following a portion-controlled diet saw no significant changes.

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An analysis of more than 63,000 French adults from the long-running NutriNet-Santé cohort found that plant-based diets built around minimally processed, nutritionally high-quality foods were associated with about a 40% lower risk of cardiovascular disease, while diets heavy in ultra-processed plant products could erase this benefit and were tied to substantially higher risk, according to researchers from INRAE and partner institutions.

A Stanford Medicine-led randomized trial in the United States found that a five-day-per-month fasting-mimicking diet was linked to improved patient-reported symptoms and lower biological markers of inflammation in adults with mild-to-moderate Crohn’s disease. The results were published in Nature Medicine.

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A Swedish study suggests that consuming more high-fat cheese could lower dementia risk by 13%, based on data from nearly 30,000 people followed for 25 years. However, experts caution that it is an observational analysis without proof of causality. Critics highlight potential confounders and the importance of factors like blood pressure and weight control.

Researchers at the University of Chicago Medicine and Columbia University report that eating more fruits and vegetables during the day was associated with better sleep that night in healthy young adults. Meeting a five‑cup daily intake used to represent CDC recommendations was linked to an estimated 16% improvement in sleep quality, based on objective measures. The authors describe this as the first study to show a same‑day association between diet and objectively measured sleep.

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New research from MIT demonstrates that prolonged high-fat diets push liver cells into a primitive state, increasing their vulnerability to cancer. By analyzing mice and human samples, scientists uncovered how these cellular changes prioritize survival over normal function, paving the way for tumors. The findings, published in Cell, highlight potential drug targets to mitigate this risk.

 

 

 

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