| Literature DB >> 22573780 |
John Foreyt1, Ronald Kleinman, Rebecca J Brown, Rachel Lindstrom.
Abstract
The rise in pediatric obesity since the 1970s has been well established in the United States and is becoming a major concern worldwide. As a potential means to help slow the obesity epidemic, low-calorie sweeteners (LCS) have gained attention as dietary tools to assist in adherence to weight loss plans or prevention of excess weight gain. Observational studies tend to show positive correlations between LCS consumption and weight gain in children and adolescents. Although the data are intriguing, these epidemiologic studies do not establish that LCS cause weight gain, because there are likely many lifestyle and genetic differences between children and families who choose to consume LCS and those who do not. Short-term randomized controlled trials have shown LCS use to be BMI neutral or to have modest weight-reducing effects in overweight and obese adolescents. The long-term effects of LCS in children and adolescents are unknown. Some compelling research is currently underway and may provide needed insight into the potential role of LCS in weight management. The paucity of data regarding the effects of LCS use in children and adolescents creates challenges in decision-making for health care providers and parents.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22573780 PMCID: PMC3738224 DOI: 10.3945/jn.111.149609
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr ISSN: 0022-3166 Impact factor: 4.798
Observational studies of LCS use in children
| Reference | Participants (age; sample; year) | Duration | Results | |
| Cross-sectional studies | ||||
| Forshee et al. ( | 3311 | 6–19 y; population-based (US); 1994–1996, 1998 | — | BMI was positively associated with LCSB consumption after adjustment for age, race, and family income |
| Giammattei et al. ( | 385 | 11–13 y; school-based (Santa Barbara, CA); 2000–2001 | — | BMI Z-score and percentage fat were positively associated with LCSB consumption (without adjustment for sociodemographic variables) |
| O'Connor et al. ( | 1160 | 2–5 y; population-based (US); 1999–2002 | — | No association was found between LCSB consumption and BMI |
| Prospective cohort studies | ||||
| Ludwig et al. ( | 548 | 11.7 ± 0.8 y; school-based (Boston, MA); 1995, 1997 | 19 mo | BMI was not associated with either baseline or change in LCSB intake, but incident obesity was negatively associated with change in LCSB intake (adjusted for baseline BMI, triceps skinfold thickness, age, gender, ethnicity, other dietary variables, physical activity, television viewing, and total energy intake) |
| Berkey et al. ( | 11654 | 9–14 y; Children of Nurses’ Health Study II (US); 1996, 1997, 1998 | 2 y | LCSB intake positively associated with BMI change in boys, but not in girls [adjusted for age, Tanner stage, race, menarche, prior BMI Z-score, linear growth, milk type (whole/2%/1%/nonfat/soy), physical activity, and inactivity] |
| Blum et al. ( | 166 | 9.3 ± 1 y; school-based (Nebraska); 1992–1996 | 2 y | LCSB intake at y 2 was positively associated with BMI Z-score at y 2 (adjusted for baseline BMI Z-score) |
| Striegel-Moore et al. ( | 2371 | 9–10 y; convenience/random sample of black and white girls (3 U.S. sites); 1987–1997 | 10 y | LCSB intake was positively associated with total daily energy intake, but not BMI (adjusted for study site, race, and other beverage consumption) |
| Johnson et al. ( | 1203 | 5 y; population-based (UK); 1997–2002 | 4 y | LCSB consumption at ages 5 and 7 y positively associated with fat mass at age 9 y (this was no longer significant after adjustment for baseline BMI, television viewing, maternal education, paternal class, parental BMI, misreporting of energy intake, dietary energy density, percentage dietary fat, and fiber density) |
| Kral et al. ( | 177 | 3 y | 3 y | No association between change in LCSB consumption and change in BMI Z-score |
LCS, low-calorie sweetener; LCSB, low-calorie sweetened beverage.
Ages are at study entry.
Controlled trials of the acute effects of LCS on food intake
| Reference | Participants | Design | Intervention | Method of randomization | Results | |
| Birch et al. ( | 18 | 3–5 y | Crossover | 2 sessions each of aspartame-sweetened (low-energy) vs. maltodextrin-sweetened (high-energy) pudding, followed by ad libitum snack; final session with intermediate-calorie pudding followed by ad libitum snack | Not specified | Snack consumption after intermediate-energy pudding was greater (by ~50 kcal) when its flavor was that previously paired with low-energy pudding vs. flavor previously paired with high-energy pudding |
| Birch et al. ( | 22 children, 26 adults | 2.5–5 y, 25–35 y | Crossover | Aspartame- vs. maltodextrin-sweetened pudding, followed by ad libitum snack | Not specified | Children had ~100% compensation |
| Birch et al. ( | 24 | 2–5 y | Crossover | Aspartame-sweetened, sucrose-sweetened, or unsweetened drink, followed by ad libitum snack | Not specified | 60% compensation in ad libitum food intake 0 min after aspartame- vs. sucrose-sweetened preload, but ~0% compensation 30 or 60 min after preload; children given aspartame-sweetened preload vs. water reduced ad libitum intake at 30 min but not at 0 or 60 min |
| Anderson et al. ( | 20 | 9–10 y | Crossover | Aspartame- or sucrose-sweetened drink, followed by ad libitum lunch | Not specified | 6% compensation in ad libitum lunch intake 90 min after aspartame- vs. sucrose-sweetened preload |
| Johnson et al. ( | 262 | 5–12 y | Crossover | Aspartame- or sugar-sweetened drink, followed by ad libitum lunch | Not specified | 49% compensation overall; compensation decreased with age and did not vary by ethnicity (non-Hispanic white vs. Hispanic) or gender |
| Bellissimo et al. ( | 14 | 9–14 y boys | Crossover | Sucralose- or glucose-sweetened drink, followed by ad libitum pizza lunch | Not specified | 94% compensation in ad libitum lunch intake 30 min after sucralose- vs. glucose-sweetened preload |
| Bellissimo et al. ( | 14 | 9–14 y boys | Crossover | Sucralose- or glucose-sweetened drink, followed by ad libitum pizza lunch | Not specified | 112% compensation in ad libitum lunch intake 30 min after sucralose- vs. glucose-sweetened preload; 66% compensation if watching TV during lunch |
LCS, low-calorie sweetener.
Ages are at study entry.
Compensation after a preload is defined as the difference in subsequent ad libitum energy intake between 2 conditions, divided by the energy in the preload.
Short-term interventional studies on LCS use in children: RCT
| Reference | Participants | Design | Intervention | Duration | Method of randomization | Results | |
| Knopp et al. ( | 55 | 10–21 y; overweight | Parallel | 2.7 g/d encapsulated aspartame vs. placebo during 1000 kcal/d diet | 13 wk | Not specified | No significant differences in weight loss between 2.7 g/d encapsulated aspartame vs. placebo |
| Ebbeling et al. ( | 103 | 13–18 y; consuming ≥12 oz (355 mL) SSB/d | Parallel | Home delivery of noncaloric drinks (bottled water and LCSB) vs. usual beverage consumption | 25 wk | Stratified, blocked randomization | No significant difference in BMI change between intervention group vs. control group; post hoc analysis showed greater BMI reduction with intervention in the tertile with highest baseline BMI (≥25.6 kg/m |
| Williams et al. ( | 32 | 11–15 y; obese girls | Parallel | 1500-kcal/d diet with SSB permitted (free snack) vs. not permitted (restricted snack) | 12 wk | Not specified | No significant difference in BMI in the 2 groups; free snack group consumed 3 ± 1.2 SSB/wk, and restricted snack group consumed 0.4 ± 0.9 LCSB/wk |
| Rodearmel et al. ( | 184 | 7–14 y; overweight | Parallel | Add 2000 steps/d + reduce 100 kcal/d (in part by using Splenda instead of sugar vs. usual lifestyle) | 24 wk | Not specified | No significant difference in change in BMI Z-score between groups; more children in intervention group maintained or reduced BMI Z-score vs. control group |
LCS, low-calorie sweetener; LCSB, low-calorie sweetener beverage; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SSB, sugar-sweetened beverage.
Ages are at study entry.