Print Friendly and PDF
PFAS obesity weight gain
Photo courtesy Kenny Eliason/Unsplash

PFAS has more effect than type of diet on weight gain: Study

Dieters who gained the most weight back after initial weight loss had high levels of PFAS – regardless of what diet they stuck to.

2 min read

Frustrated that the pounds keep flooding back after losing weight on a diet?


PFAS, pervasive environmental contaminants known as "forever chemicals," could play a role, according to a new study published Wednesday in the journal Obesity.

The study took a novel approach to a frustrating conundrum many adults have experienced at some point: Pounds that slowly creep back on after successful weight loss and despite faithful adherence to a healthier diet.

Researchers tracked the post-diet results of 381 Europeans who had lost a minimum of 8% of their original weight after two months of dieting, and tested their blood for per-and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, a family of chemicals used to make everything from firefighting foam to nonstick products and that have been linked to obesity.

'The obesity pandemic'

Farmers Market healthy diet

Photo courtesy Milada Vigerova/Unsplash

All participants stayed on a specific diet for at least 26 weeks after the initial weight loss. Those who gained the most weight back had the highest levels of PFAS chemicals, researchers found. Study participants ranking in the top third of PFAS exposure regained an average of 10 pounds more than those in the bottom third of the exposure curve.

And perhaps even more alarming, higher background PFAS exposures had an even greater effect on weight gain than the diet, researchers found.

"The results suggest that PFOA and PFHxS may cause weight gain among people with obesity in weight loss programs," the researchers concluded. "These pollutants deserve attention in public health efforts to control the obesity pandemic."

Obesity has several causes. But researchers have long been puzzled at how people on the same diets – say, low carbohydrate – react so differently, suggesting some other factors are at play.

Hormone hijackers

The new research suggests that PFAS and other mostly invisible environmental contaminants could play a role.

"PFAS exposures add to our risk of obesity," said Philippe Grandjean, a study author and a research professor at the University of Rhode Island. "It’s not just a matter of lacking physical activity and eating a poor diet."

Grandjean and colleagues previously examined weight loss and weight gains in people from Massachusetts and Louisiana and found PFAS exposure was linked to gaining weight back after initial loss via dieting. The researchers pointed out that PFAS have been shown to interfere with thyroid hormones, which are crucial for maintaining proper metabolism.

Americans have more PFAS

There are a number of confounding factors, however, the authors note in the new study. For starters, we are awash in obesogens — chemicals that can cause the human (and animal) body to produce, store and burn fat tissue differently than it normally would. Everything from BPA to air pollution affects how our body processes, stores and reacts to calories.

The study sample was fairly homogenous, consisting of adults with obesity in Europe.

It's an area worth studying, the researchers suggest. "Given the sizable increases in weight regain linked to PFAS exposures," they wrote, "future dietary trials may wisely consider blood concentrations of these contaminants to obtain more precise results."

About the author(s):

Douglas Fischer

Douglas Fischer is the executive director of Environmental Health Sciences, which publishes EHN.org.

Become a donor
Today's top news

EHS welcomes new reporter to focus on petrochemical pollution in Texas

Cami Ferrell heads up our new bilingual reporting bureau in Texas.

Oil and gas production responsible for $77 billion in annual US health damages: Study

Proposed EPA methane limits may help curtail 7,500 yearly deaths from oil and gas production sites.

From our newsroom

LISTEN: How becoming a mother changed these researchers

“Being a mom is the most difficult thing I have ever done.”

Are you spreading PFAS on your morning toast?

New testing finds evidence of “forever chemicals” in the wrappers of eight brands of butter.

National Parks' grandeur degraded by global warming

If there is anywhere in the nation that holds the promise to inspire unified action on climate change, it is the national parks.

Opinion: Why PFAS have no place in everyday products, including paint

A recent study by Healthy Building Network finds 50% of paints tested contain PFAS. Chief Research Officer Teresa McGrath shares the risks and how to avoid these dangerous chemicals in paint.