Modern diets are increasingly dominated by what nutrition scientists call ultra-processed foods (UPFs). These products — engineered for convenience, shelf-life, and hyper-palatable taste — have become dietary staples across much of the developed world. Yet a growing body of research suggests that their impact may extend far beyond weight gain or metabolic disease, reaching into one of the most fundamental aspects of human health: reproduction.
What exactly are "ultra-processed foods"?
The most widely used framework is the NOVA classification system, developed by Brazilian researcher Carlos Monteiro. Under this system, foods fall into four categories:
1.Unprocessed or minimally processed foods – fresh fruit, vegetables, meat, milk
2.Processed culinary ingredients – oils, butter, sugar, salt
3.Processed foods – bread, cheese, canned vegetables
4.Ultra-processed foods (UPFs) – industrial formulations made largely from extracted or synthetic ingredients
UPFs are typically:
Made from refined substances (e.g. starches, sugars, oils, protein isolates)
Containing additives (flavour enhancers, emulsifiers, colourings)
Designed to be ready-to-eat, long shelf-life, and highly palatable
Common examples include:
Soft drinks and energy drinks
Packaged snacks (chips, biscuits)
Ready meals and frozen dinners
Processed meats (sausages, nuggets)
Many breakfast cereals and protein bars
They are, in essence, products of industrial formulation rather than traditional food preparation .
Why concern has grown
Ultra-processed foods are now linked to a wide range of chronic conditions — obesity, cardiovascular disease, type 2 diabetes, and even mental health disorders. These associations are not merely about calories; research increasingly suggests that the processing itself matters, not just the nutrient content.
Mechanisms proposed include:
Disruption of gut microbiota
Increased exposure to food additives and packaging chemicals
Effects on hormonal regulation
Reduced intake of fibre and micronutrients
This raises a deeper question: if UPFs can affect metabolism and hormones, could they also affect fertility?
Emerging evidence: fertility and reproductive health
Male fertility
Several recent studies point in a consistent direction: higher consumption of ultra-processed foods is associated with poorer sperm quality.
Findings include:
Lower sperm count, concentration, and motility in men with high UPF intake
Associations with abnormal sperm function (asthenozoospermia)
Evidence from controlled trials showing reduced testosterone and hormonal disruption
Importantly, some research suggests that simply replacing UPFs with minimally processed foods improves semen parameters, indicating a potentially reversible effect.
Female fertility and early development
The evidence on female fertility is newer but increasingly concerning:
High UPF intake has been associated with increased risk of infertility in women
Maternal consumption around conception is linked to smaller embryonic growth
A recent observational study also found that:
Couples with higher UPF intake took longer to conceive
Early embryonic development markers were reduced
Risks of adverse pregnancy outcomes may be higher
While such studies cannot prove causation, they are consistent with a broader pattern linking diet quality to reproductive success.
Interpreting the evidence: caution and context
It is crucial not to overstate the case.
Much of the evidence is observational, meaning it shows correlation, not definitive causation
Diet often correlates with other factors (exercise, smoking, socioeconomic status)
Definitions of UPFs can be imperfect or debated
However, the direction of evidence is remarkably consistent:
Diets high in ultra-processed foods tend to correlate with poorer reproductive outcomes, while whole-food diets correlate with better ones.
Even critics of the UPF concept generally agree on the practical takeaway: diets centred on whole or minimally processed foods are healthier.
Why might UPFs affect fertility?
Several plausible mechanisms are under investigation:
Endocrine disruption: additives or packaging chemicals may interfere with hormones
Oxidative stress and inflammation: damaging sperm and reproductive tissues
Nutrient dilution: replacing nutrient-dense foods with energy-dense but poor-quality calories
Metabolic effects: insulin resistance and obesity impacting reproductive systems
In short, fertility — like overall health — appears sensitive not just to how much we eat, but what kind of food we consume.
Conclusion: a precautionary principle
The evidence does not yet justify alarmism, but it does justify attention.
Ultra-processed foods are not merely a convenience; they represent a profound shift in how humans eat. The emerging research suggests that this shift may carry subtle but significant biological costs — including potential impacts on fertility and early human development.
Given what is at stake, a cautious approach is reasonable:
Reduce reliance on ultra-processed foods
Emphasise whole, minimally processed foods
Treat diet as a factor not just in long-term health — but in reproductive health
In public health terms, this is a classic case for the precautionary principle:
when evidence of harm is emerging but not yet conclusive, it is prudent to minimise exposure.