Hypotheses and evidence related to intense sweeteners and effects on appetite and body weight changes: A scoping review of reviews.

Observed associations between consumption of diet foods and obesity have sparked controversy over whether intense sweeteners may promote weight gain, despite their negligible energy contribution. We conducted a scoping review of reviews, to obtain an overview of hypotheses, research approaches and f...

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Main Authors: Annhild Mosdøl, Gunn Elisabeth Vist, Camilla Svendsen, Hubert Dirven, Inger Therese Laugsand Lillegaard, Gro Haarklou Mathisen, Trine Husøy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2018-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6051566?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-b5eda828b0a4402abbeb95430fbf3e9c2020-11-24T21:52:12ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032018-01-01137e019955810.1371/journal.pone.0199558Hypotheses and evidence related to intense sweeteners and effects on appetite and body weight changes: A scoping review of reviews.Annhild MosdølGunn Elisabeth VistCamilla SvendsenHubert DirvenInger Therese Laugsand LillegaardGro Haarklou MathisenTrine HusøyObserved associations between consumption of diet foods and obesity have sparked controversy over whether intense sweeteners may promote weight gain, despite their negligible energy contribution. We conducted a scoping review of reviews, to obtain an overview of hypotheses, research approaches and features of the evidence on intense sweeteners' potential relationships to appetite and weight changes. We searched for reviews of the scientific literature published from 2006 to May 2017. Two reviewers independently assessed title and abstracts, and full text publications. Arksey and O'Malley's framework for scoping reviews guided the process. We extracted and charted data on characteristics of the reviews and the evidence presented. The 40 included reviews present hypotheses both on how intense sweeteners can reduce or maintain body weight and on how these can promote weight gain. We classified only five publications as systematic reviews; another nine presented some systematic approaches, while 26 reviews did not describe criteria for selecting or assessing the primary studies. Evidence was often presented for intense sweeteners as a group or unspecified, and against several comparators (e.g. sugar, water, placebo, intake levels) with limited discussion on the interpretation of different combinations. Apart from the observational studies, the presented primary evidence in humans is dominated by small studies with short follow-up-considered insufficient to assess weight change. Systematic reviews of animal studies are lacking in this topic area. The systematic evidence only partly explore forwarded hypotheses found in the literature. Primary studies in humans seem to be available for systematic exploration of some hypotheses, but long-term experimental studies in humans appear sparse. With few exceptions, the reviews on intense sweeteners and weight change underuse systematic methodology, and thus, the available evidence. Further studies and systematic reviews should be explicit about the hypothesis explored and elucidate possible underlying mechanisms.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6051566?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Annhild Mosdøl
Gunn Elisabeth Vist
Camilla Svendsen
Hubert Dirven
Inger Therese Laugsand Lillegaard
Gro Haarklou Mathisen
Trine Husøy
spellingShingle Annhild Mosdøl
Gunn Elisabeth Vist
Camilla Svendsen
Hubert Dirven
Inger Therese Laugsand Lillegaard
Gro Haarklou Mathisen
Trine Husøy
Hypotheses and evidence related to intense sweeteners and effects on appetite and body weight changes: A scoping review of reviews.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Annhild Mosdøl
Gunn Elisabeth Vist
Camilla Svendsen
Hubert Dirven
Inger Therese Laugsand Lillegaard
Gro Haarklou Mathisen
Trine Husøy
author_sort Annhild Mosdøl
title Hypotheses and evidence related to intense sweeteners and effects on appetite and body weight changes: A scoping review of reviews.
title_short Hypotheses and evidence related to intense sweeteners and effects on appetite and body weight changes: A scoping review of reviews.
title_full Hypotheses and evidence related to intense sweeteners and effects on appetite and body weight changes: A scoping review of reviews.
title_fullStr Hypotheses and evidence related to intense sweeteners and effects on appetite and body weight changes: A scoping review of reviews.
title_full_unstemmed Hypotheses and evidence related to intense sweeteners and effects on appetite and body weight changes: A scoping review of reviews.
title_sort hypotheses and evidence related to intense sweeteners and effects on appetite and body weight changes: a scoping review of reviews.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Observed associations between consumption of diet foods and obesity have sparked controversy over whether intense sweeteners may promote weight gain, despite their negligible energy contribution. We conducted a scoping review of reviews, to obtain an overview of hypotheses, research approaches and features of the evidence on intense sweeteners' potential relationships to appetite and weight changes. We searched for reviews of the scientific literature published from 2006 to May 2017. Two reviewers independently assessed title and abstracts, and full text publications. Arksey and O'Malley's framework for scoping reviews guided the process. We extracted and charted data on characteristics of the reviews and the evidence presented. The 40 included reviews present hypotheses both on how intense sweeteners can reduce or maintain body weight and on how these can promote weight gain. We classified only five publications as systematic reviews; another nine presented some systematic approaches, while 26 reviews did not describe criteria for selecting or assessing the primary studies. Evidence was often presented for intense sweeteners as a group or unspecified, and against several comparators (e.g. sugar, water, placebo, intake levels) with limited discussion on the interpretation of different combinations. Apart from the observational studies, the presented primary evidence in humans is dominated by small studies with short follow-up-considered insufficient to assess weight change. Systematic reviews of animal studies are lacking in this topic area. The systematic evidence only partly explore forwarded hypotheses found in the literature. Primary studies in humans seem to be available for systematic exploration of some hypotheses, but long-term experimental studies in humans appear sparse. With few exceptions, the reviews on intense sweeteners and weight change underuse systematic methodology, and thus, the available evidence. Further studies and systematic reviews should be explicit about the hypothesis explored and elucidate possible underlying mechanisms.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6051566?pdf=render
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