Nonnutritive sweeteners in weight management and chronic disease: A review

Auteur(s): Sylvetsky AC and Rother KI
Nom de la publication : Obesity (2018) 26, 635-640. doi:10.1002/oby.22139
Année de publication : 2018

Abstract

Objective: The objective of this review was to critically review findings from recent studies evaluating the effects of nonnutritive sweeteners (NNSs) on metabolism, weight, and obesity-related chronic diseases. Biologic mechanisms that may explain NNS effects will also be addressed.
Methods: A comprehensive review of the relevant scientific literature was conducted.
Results: Most cross-sectional and prospective cohort studies report positive associations between NNS consumption, body weight, and health conditions, including type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease. Although findings in cellular and rodent models suggest that NNSs have harmful effects on metabolic health, most randomized controlled trials in humans demonstrate marginal benefits of NNS use on body weight, with little data available on other metabolic outcomes.
Conclusions: NNS consumption is associated with higher body weight and metabolic disease in observational studies. In contrast, randomized controlled trials demonstrate that NNSs may support weight loss, particularly when used alongside behavioral weight loss support. Additional long-term, well-con- trolled intervention studies in humans are needed to determine the effects of NNSs on weight, adiposity, and chronic disease under free-living conditions.

Summary

This review study compares evidence regarding the role of low calorie sweeteners in weight management between observational studies and randomised clinical trials (RCTs) and concludes that RCTs demonstrate that low calorie sweeteners may support weight loss, particularly when used alongside behavioral weight loss support. In contrast, some observational studies suggest a positive association between low calorie sweeteners and higher body weight and metabolic disease, however, observational studies, by nature, are studies unable to establish cause and effect and they are subject to inherently flawed dietary assessments or can be biased by reverse causality and residual confounding. The authors also call for further research to explore the discrepancies between controlled clinical trials’ findings and observational data.

The paper also discusses proposed physiological mechanisms that have been examined in in-vitro or animal studies to explore how would be possible for low calorie sweeteners, which provide no calories, to affect body weight. In discussing potential mechanisms (for example: LCS effects on sweet taste receptors, alterations in gut microbiota, impact in taste preferences, disturbance of relationship between sweetness and calories), the authors state that it is unclear whether the same potential mechanisms would be expected in humans and that these mechanisms warrant further investigation. Other review papers addressing the mechanisms by which low calorie sweeteners may hypothetically promote energy intake, reveals that none are substantiated by the available evidence (Mattes & Popkin, 2009Bryant & McLaughlin, 2016Rogers, 2017) Indeed, no mechanism has been validated at more than a descriptive level, so they should be viewed as speculative.

View full paper

Résumé de la politique de confidentialité

Ce site utilise des cookies afin que nous puissions vous fournir la meilleure expérience utilisateur possible. Les informations sur les cookies sont stockées dans votre navigateur et remplissent des fonctions telles que vous reconnaître lorsque vous revenez sur notre site Web et aider notre équipe à comprendre les sections du site que vous trouvez les plus intéressantes et utiles.

Cookies strictement nécessaires

Cette option doit être activée à tout moment afin que nous puissions enregistrer vos préférences pour les réglages de cookie.

Si vous désactivez ce cookie, nous ne pourrons pas enregistrer vos préférences. Cela signifie que chaque fois que vous visitez ce site, vous devrez activer ou désactiver à nouveau les cookies.

Cookies tiers

Ce site utilise Google Analytics pour collecter des informations anonymes telles que le nombre de visiteurs du site et les pages les plus populaires.

Garder ce cookie activé nous aide à améliorer notre site Web.