| Literature DB >> 22354959 |
John L Sievenpiper1, Laura Chiavaroli, Russell J de Souza, Arash Mirrahimi, Adrian I Cozma, Vanessa Ha, D David Wang, Matthew E Yu, Amanda J Carleton, Joseph Beyene, Marco Di Buono, Alexandra L Jenkins, Lawrence A Leiter, Thomas M S Wolever, Cyril W C Kendall, David J A Jenkins.
Abstract
Contrary to concerns that fructose may have adverse metabolic effects, there is evidence that small, 'catalytic' doses ( ≤ 10 g/meal) of fructose decrease the glycaemic response to high-glycaemic index meals in human subjects. To assess the longer-term effects of 'catalytic' doses of fructose, we undertook a meta-analysis of controlled feeding trials. We searched MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL and the Cochrane Library. Analyses included all controlled feeding trials ≥ 7 d featuring 'catalytic' fructose doses ( ≤ 36 g/d) in isoenergetic exchange for other carbohydrates. Data were pooled by the generic inverse variance method using random-effects models and expressed as mean differences (MD) with 95 % CI. Heterogeneity was assessed by the Q statistic and quantified by I 2. The Heyland Methodological Quality Score assessed study quality. A total of six feeding trials (n 118) met the eligibility criteria. 'Catalytic' doses of fructose significantly reduced HbA1c (MD - 0·40, 95 % CI - 0·72, - 0·08) and fasting glucose (MD - 0·25, 95 % CI - 0·44, - 0·07). This benefit was seen in the absence of adverse effects on fasting insulin, body weight, TAG or uric acid. Subgroup and sensitivity analyses showed evidence of effect modification under certain conditions. The small number of trials and their relatively short duration limit the strength of the conclusions. In conclusion, this small meta-analysis shows that 'catalytic' fructose doses ( ≤ 36 g/d) may improve glycaemic control without adverse effects on body weight, TAG, insulin and uric acid. There is a need for larger, longer ( ≥ 6 months) trials using 'catalytic' fructose to confirm these results.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22354959 PMCID: PMC3411192 DOI: 10.1017/S000711451200013X
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Nutr ISSN: 0007-1145 Impact factor: 3.718
Characteristics of controlled feeding trials investigating the effect of ‘catalytic’ doses (≤36 g/d) of fructose on cardiometabolic endpoints
MQS, Methodological Quality Score; OW/OB, overweight/obese; OP, outpatient; P, parallel; Met, metabolic; DM2, type 2 diabetes mellitus; M, male; F, female; C, cross-over; S, supplement; DM1, type 1 diabetes mellitus; N, normal; IP, inpatient.
Met feeding control represents the provision of all meals, snacks and study supplements (test sugars and foods) during the study. S feeding control represents the provision of study supplements.
Doses preceded by ‘about’ represent average doses, where fructose was administered on a % energy or g/kg body-weight basis.
Fructose was provided in one of two forms: (1) a liquid form, where all or most of the fructose was provided as beverages or crystalline fructose to be added to beverages, or (2) in a mixed form, where all or most of the fructose was provided as beverages, solid foods and/or crystalline fructose to be added to beverages and/or foods.
Comparator refers to the reference carbohydrate (glucose, galactose, starch or sucrose).
Values are for the ratio of carbohydrate:fat:protein.
The Heyland MQS assigns scores from 0 to 1 or 0 to 2 over nine categories of quality related to study design, sampling procedures and interventions for a total of thirteen points. Trials scored ≥ 8 were considered high quality().
Agency funding represents funding from government, university or not-for-profit health agency sources. None of the trialists declared any conflicts of interest.
Fig. 1Forest plots of controlled feeding trials investigating the effect of isoenergetic exchange of ‘catalytic’ fructose doses ( ≤ 36 g/d) for other carbohydrates on glycaemic endpoints: (a) HbA1c, (b) fasting blood glucose (FBG) and (c) fasting blood insulin (FBI). Paired analyses were applied to the one cross-over trial by Grigoresco et al.(). To mitigate a unit-of-analysis error, we used only the starch comparison for Blayo et al.() and the glucose comparison for Rizkalla et al. (Expt 1 and 2)(). Values are between-treatment end differences for five of the six trials (Grigoresco et al.(), Blayo et al.(), Vaisman et al.(), and Sunehag et al.(), Rizkalla et al. (Expt 1)()) in the HbA1c analysis and for all trials in the FBG and FBI analyses, as change-from-baseline data were not available. P values are for generic inverse variance (IV) random-effects models, with differences expressed as mean differences (MD) with 95 % CI(). Inter-study heterogeneity was tested by Cochrane's Q statistic (χ2) at a significance level of P < 0·10 and quantified by I2 (). CHO, carbohydrate.