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With references cited to YouTube and NPR, I have trouble trusting anything in this article. Maybe send us to some peer-reviewed study?
I'm referring to the content of the video itself. I don't know what you mean by "article" really. When you watch the video, you will see Dr. Seyfried referring to many studies, primarily his own, but possibly others as well. (I'd have to watch it again to parse out which studies were whose.)

Perhaps you can find some references to peer-reviewed studies inside the content of the video. Let me know! When I get some time, I'll watch it again myself.

Sorry, I do know what you mean by "article" now, namely all that text below the video. :) All I'm focused on is the video itself, which I highly recommend watching.
I've got the video playing in the background while I work, scanning for references. The first reference is to his own book, "Cancer as a Metabolic Disease", by Thomas Seyfried, John Wiley & Sons, 2012. Presumably he cites many other studies there, I don't know.

I'm only about 7 minutes in, but I do also see a reference to Arismendi-Morillo "Int J Biochem Cell Biol" 41, 2062-68, 2009.

I'll keep updating here.