Non-caloric sweeteners are common food supplements consumed by millions worldwide as means of combating weight gain and diabetes, by retaining sweet taste without increasing caloric intake. While they are considered safe, there is increasing debate regarding their potential role in contributing to metabolic derangements in some humans. The investigators recently demonstrated that non-caloric sweeteners consumption could induce glucose intolerance in mice and, in preliminary experiments, in distinct human subsets, by functionally altering the gut microbiome, and that the gut microbiome plays an important role in mediating differential glucose responses to identical foods. The proportion of the human population that is susceptible to glucose intolerance induced by non-caloric sweeteners, the common factors that are shared between these individuals and whether and how the microbiome promotes the metabolic derangements remain to be addressed.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
120
Daily consumption of 5g of glucose, for 14 days.
Daily consumption of six commercially available sachets containing aspartame and glucose as bulking agent (1g each sachet), for 14 days.
Daily consumption of six commercially available sachets containing sucralose and glucose as bulking agent (1g each sachet), for 14 days.
Daily consumption of six commercially available sachets containing saccharine and glucose as bulking agent (1g each sachet), for 14 days.
Daily consumption of six commercially available sachets containing Stevia and glucose as bulking agent (1g each sachet), for 14 days.
Follow up without any dietary supplementation.
Weizmann Institute of Science
Rehovot, Israel
Blood glucose level
Continuous glucose monitor device
Time frame: 28 days
Microbiome
Stool and oral samples
Time frame: 28 days
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