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Trends in trans fatty acid levels in the Canadian food supply (632.12)
Author(s) -
Arcand JoAnne,
Scourboutakos Mary,
Au Jennifer,
L'Abbe Mary
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
the faseb journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.709
H-Index - 277
eISSN - 1530-6860
pISSN - 0892-6638
DOI - 10.1096/fasebj.28.1_supplement.632.12
Subject(s) - trans fat , food science , chemistry , saturated fat , cholesterol , biochemistry
Dietary trans fatty acids (TFA) increase risk for heart disease. In 2007, Canada adopted voluntary TFA limits for food (<5% total fat, <2% total fat for fats) and recommended that unsaturated fat replace TFA, over saturated fat. Mandatory TFA labeling was implemented and a government‐led Trans Fat Monitoring Program (TFMP) measured and publicly reported TFA levels by company/brand. This study assessed changes in TFA levels in the food supply and if saturated fats are higher in foods with lower TFA. Data from Health Canada’s TFMP (n=921, 2006‐2009) and the University of Toronto food (n=5544, 2010‐2011) and restaurant (n=4272, 2010) databases were used. The proportion of foods meeting TFA limits improved from 75.4% in 2006‐2009 to 96.1% in 2010‐2011, particularly in packaged foods: croissants (25 to 100%), pies (36 to 98%), cakes (43 to 90%), and garlic spread (33 to 100%). Most TFMP restaurant categories, except for muffins (95%) had 100% of foods meeting TFA limits in 2010. Some food categories had a large proportion of foods exceeding TFA limits: dairy‐free cheeses (100%), frosting (72.0%), shortening (66.7%), coffee whiteners (66.7%), and restaurant‐prepared biscuits and scones (47.4%). Coffee whiteners, donuts, popcorn and frosting that exceeded TFA limits contributed >25% TFA to total fat. Saturated fat was higher (p<0.05) in some foods with low TFA levels: chocolate chip, chocolate covered and sandwich cookies, brownies and squares, cakes with pudding/mousse, dessert topping, and among restaurant‐prepared cookies. There is an impressive improvement in TFA levels in the Canadian food supply, demonstrating that voluntary limits and monitoring are effective in reducing TFA in the food supply. Efforts should focus on reducing TFA where levels remain high and on limiting the use of saturated fat to replace TFA.