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Effect of Fructose on Body Weight in Controlled Feeding Trials A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis

Journal

ANNALS OF INTERNAL MEDICINE
Volume 156, Issue 4, Pages 291-U91

Publisher

AMER COLL PHYSICIANS
DOI: 10.7326/0003-4819-156-4-201202210-00007

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research Knowledge Synthesis
  3. Calorie Control Council
  4. Province of Ontario Postdoctoral Fellowship
  5. Edie Steinberg Scholarship Fund
  6. Edward Christie Stevens Fellowship in Medicine
  7. Government of Canada through the Canada Research Chair Endowment

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Background: The contribution of fructose consumption in Western diets to overweight and obesity in populations remains uncertain. Purpose: To review the effects of fructose on body weight in controlled feeding trials. Data Sources: MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, and the Cochrane Library (through 18 November 2011). Study Selection: At least 3 reviewers identified controlled feeding trials lasting 7 or more days that compared the effect on body weight of free fructose and nonfructose carbohydrate in diets providing similar calories (isocaloric trials) or of diets supplemented with free fructose to provide excess energy and usual or control diets (hypercaloric trials). Trials evaluating high-fructose corn syrup (42% to 55% free fructose) were excluded. Data Extraction: The reviewers independently reviewed and extracted relevant data; disagreements were reconciled by consensus. The Heyland Methodological Quality Score was used to assess study quality. Data Synthesis: Thirty-one isocaloric trials (637 participants) and 10 hypercaloric trials (119 participants) were included; studies tended to be small (<15 participants), short (<12 weeks), and of low quality. Fructose had no overall effect on body weight in isocaloric trials (mean difference, -0.14 kg [95% CI, -0.37 to 0.10 kg] for fructose compared with nonfructose carbohydrate). High doses of fructose in hypercaloric trials (+104 to 250 g/d, +18% to 97% of total daily energy intake) lead to significant increases in weight (mean difference, 0.53 kg [CI, 0.26 to 0.79 kg] with fructose). Limitations: Most trials had methodological limitations and were of poor quality. The weight-increasing effect of fructose in hypercaloric trials may have been attributable to excess energy rather than fructose itself. Conclusion: Fructose does not seem to cause weight gain when it is substituted for other carbohydrates in diets providing similar calories. Free fructose at high doses that provided excess calories modestly increased body weight, an effect that may be due to the extra calories rather than the fructose.

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