A Trial of Sugar-free or Sugar-Sweetened Beverages and Body Weight in Children
Amsterdam Public Health · Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Abstract
The consumption of beverages that contain sugar is associated with overweight, possibly because liquid sugars do not lead to a sense of satiety, so the consumption of other foods is not reduced. However, data are lacking to show that the replacement of sugar-containing beverages with noncaloric beverages diminishes weight gain.
We conducted an 18-month trial involving 641 primarily normal-weight children from 4 years 10 months to 11 years 11 months of age. Participants were randomly assigned to receive 250 ml (8 oz) per day of a sugar-free, artificially sweetened beverage (sugar-free group) or a similar sugar-containing beverage that provided 104 kcal (sugar group). Beverages were distributed through schools. At 18 months, 26% of the children had stopped consuming the beverages; the data from children who did not complete the study were imputed.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 55.67
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 50
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Sugar
- Overweight
- Body mass index
- Medicine
- Obesity
- Free sugar
- Food science
- Waist
- Zero hunger