On 2017 Feb 03, DAVID LUDWIG commented:
In his comment of January 31, 2017, Hall presses an extreme argument, that he successfully "falsified" major aspects of the Carbohydrate-Insulin Model (CIM) of obesity, and complains that opponents won't embrace their error. His argument boils down to 3 points:
First, Hall’s small 6-day study and his small, “observational,” “pilot” study are fundamentally correct. Regarding the 6-day study Hall KD, 2015, he continues to insist that results of a very short intervention have relevance to understanding the long-term effects of macronutrients on body composition, despite evidence that adaptation to a higher-fat diet can take at least a week and perhaps considerably longer Hawley JA, 2011 Vazquez JA, 1992 Veum VL, 2017. (We need look no further than his observational study Hall KD, 2016, to see in Figure 2B that the transient decrease in rate of fat loss upon initiation of the low-carbohydrate diet accelerates after 2 weeks.) Of note, the 36 g/d greater predicted body fat loss on his low-fat diet would, if persistent, translate into a massive advantage in adiposity after just one year. If anything, the meta-analyses of long-term clinical trials suggest the opposite Tobias DK, 2015 Mansoor N, 2016 Mancini JG, 2016 Sackner-Bernstein J, 2015 Bueno NB, 2013. Furthermore, Hall’s two studies are mutually inconsistent: The 6-day study implies a major increase in energy expenditure from fat oxidation on the low-fat diet, whereas the observational study shows an increase in energy expenditure after 2 weeks (by doubly-labeled water) on the low-carbohydrate diet. Other limitations of his observational study have been considered elsewhere.
Second, our randomized 3-arm cross-over study Ebbeling CB, 2012 is fundamentally wrong. I’ve addressed Hall’s concerns elsewhere. Here, he reiterates that the 10% difference in protein content (intended by design to reflect the Atkins diet) could account for our observed 325 kcal/d difference in energy expenditure. However, there is no basis in the literature for this belief. Among 10 studies published at the time of our feeding trial in which protein intake was compared within the physiological range (10 to 35% of total energy), energy expenditure on the higher vs. lower protein diets ranged from +95 kcal/d to -97 kcal/d, with the mean difference of near zero Dulloo AG, 1999 Hochstenbach-Waelen A, 2009 Lejeune MP, 2006 Luscombe ND, 2003 Mikkelsen PB, 2000 Veldhorst MA, 2009 Veldhorst MA, 2010 Westerterp KR, 1999 Westerterp-Plantenga MS, 2009 Whitehead JM, 1996. Though these studies have methodological limitations themselves, the finding is consistent with thermodynamic considerations that indicate a very minor increment in the "thermic effect of food" from a 10% increase in protein.
Third, 18 other studies provide definitive support his position. This facile contention disregards that these studies are riddled with the same inherent limitations as his studies, including a combination of short duration, highly limited power, indirect measurements of body composition, reliance on metabolic chambers (which have been shown to underestimate adaptive thermogenesis compared to doubly-labeled water Rosenbaum M, 1996), quality control concerns and other issues. Of the cited studies, six were 1 to 4 days Astrup A, 1994 Dirlewanger M, 2000 Davy KP, 2001 Smith SR, 2000 Thearle MS, 2013 Yerboeket-van de Venne WP, 1996, seven were 7 to 15 days Horton TJ, 1995 Shepard TY, 2001 Eckel RH, 2006 Hill JO, 1991 Schrauwen P, 1997 Treuth MS, 2003 Yang MU, 1976, and just five were 4 to 6 weeks. One of these longer studies was based on recovered data from about 30 years prior to publication, with no direct measurements of body composition or energy expenditure Leibel RL, 1992. The other four longer studies employed severe calorie restriction, which would plausibly obscure macronutrient effects over this short duration. Two of these studies had just 4 subjects per diet group Rumpler WV, 1991 Bogardus C, 1981. The remaining two showed either a non-significant (2 kg lower total body fat) Golay A, 1996 or significant (30 cc lower visceral fat) Miyashita Y, 2004 advantage for the lower-carbohydrate diet. We’ve been down this road before, with the launch of the 40-year low-fat diet era based on over-interpretation of methodologically limited research. Let’s not make the same mistake again.
Even as he over-interprets the short-term feeding studies, Hall disregards extensive animal research, high quality observational studies, mechanistic studies, and clinical trials in support of CIM, as summarized here and elsewhere Ludwig DS, 2014 Lucan SC, 2015 Templeman NM, 2017.
Finally, Hall claims that I misunderstand the notion of “energy gap.” As both Hall and I Katan MB, 2010 have considered elsewhere, a decrease in energy intake produces a compensatory decrease in energy expenditure, resulting in less weight loss than would be predicted from the simple observation that a pound of fat contains 3500 kcal. However, here we consider the opposite phenomenon – an increase in energy expenditure resulting from changing dietary quality, not quantity. There is no reason to believe that compensatory increases in energy intake would occur as a result of faster metabolic rate over a similar time frame as that observed with compensatory changes to energy restriction. (Indeed, Hall himself acknowledges the possibility that low-carbohydrate diets might also lower energy intake.) Of course, progressive weight loss regardless of cause would eventually reduce energy expenditure, but we cannot infer from current data when that energy gap would reach zero. Even with conventional assumptions, NIDDK’s Body Weight Planner indicates the 150 kcal/d change in energy balance Hall found on the low-carbohydrate diet by doubly-labeled water would produce more than a 15 lb weight loss for a typical individual over several years – amounting to half the mean change in weight that occurred during the obesity epidemic in the U.S. Why would we dismiss findings with such major potential public health significance?
Hall's premature claims of (at least partial) victory and calls for curtailment of funding for more research Freedhoff Y, 2016 do not do justice to a complicated scientific question. In view of the failure of conventional obesity treatment and the massive public health challenges, all participants in this debate would do well to acknowledge the limitations of existing evidence and join in the design of more definitive research.
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