Dietary climate impact correlates ambiguously with health biomarkers– a randomised controlled trial in healthy Finnish adults
Springer Nature
2025
s00394-025-03609-w.pdf - Publisher's version - 3.18 MB
How to cite: Saarinen, M., Pellinen, T., Kostensalo, J. et al. Dietary climate impact correlates ambiguously with health biomarkers– a randomised controlled trial in healthy Finnish adults. Eur J Nutr 64, 95 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00394-025-03609-w
Pysyvä osoite
Tiivistelmä
Purpose: A transition to more plant-rich diets is an effective way to reduce the climate impact of a diet. Using a whole-diet approach, we studied how partial replacement of animal-sourced with plant-sourced proteins affected the dietary climate impact while simultaneously considering diet-related health biomarkers.
Methods: In a 12-week randomised controlled trial, 107 women and 29 men were assigned into three diet groups (ANIMAL, 50/50, PLANT) with animal-to-plant-protein ratios of 70/30, 50/50, and 30/70, respectively. Life-cycle-assessment-based coefficients for foods were used to assess the climate impact of the diet groups, based on four-day food records. Correlations between climate impact and biomarkers were assessed.
Results: The climate impact (CO2 eq.) for PLANT was 3.32 kg per day, 3.05 kg per 2,000 kcal, and 0.04 kg per gram of protein, for 50/50 4.34, 4.20, and 0.05 kg, and for ANIMAL 4.93, 4.94, and 0.06 kg, respectively (p < 0.05 for all except ANIMAL vs. 50/50 /g protein and /2,000 kcal). Climate impact correlated weakly positively with colorectal cancer risk markers and a positive status of bone turnover, but not with cardiometabolic risk markers. Animal-based iron intake and climate impact (per 2,000 kcal) had a strong positive correlation 0.70 C.I. [0.60, 0.77], while saturated fat (0.29 [0.13, 0.44]) and calcium (0.37, [0.22, 0.51]) intake had a weak positive correlation, and fibre intake (− 0.37, [− 0.51, − 0.21]) a weak negative correlation with climate impact.
Conclusion: Replacing animal-sourced proteins with plant-sourced proteins reduced the climate impact of the diet. The relationship between climate impact and biomarkers was more ambiguous indicated by both beneficial and harmful indicators within lower climate impacts.
Clinical trial registry: NCT03206827; registration date: 2017–06–30.
ISBN
OKM-julkaisutyyppi
A1 Alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä aikakauslehdessä
Julkaisusarja
European journal of nutrition
Volyymi
64
Numero
2
Sivut
Sivut
14 p.
ISSN
1436-6207
1436-6215
1436-6215
