Wolff Emily, Dansinger Michael L
Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Medscape J Med. 2008;10(8):189. Epub 2008 Aug 12.
Soft drink consumption in the United States has tripled in recent decades, paralleling the dramatic increases in obesity prevalence. The purpose of this clinical review is to evaluate the extent to which current scientific evidence supports a causal link between sugar-sweetened soft drink consumption and weight gain.
MEDLINE search of articles published in all languages between 1966 and December 2006 containing key words or medical subheadings, such as "soft drinks" and "weight." Additional articles were obtained by reviewing references of retrieved articles, including a recent systematic review. All reports with cross-sectional, prospective cohort, or clinical trial data in humans were considered.
Six of 15 cross-sectional and 6 of 10 prospective cohort studies identified statistically significant associations between soft drink consumption and increased body weight. There were 5 clinical trials; the two that involved adolescents indicated that efforts to reduce sugar-sweetened soft drinks slowed weight gain. In adults, 3 small experimental studies suggested that consumption of sugar-sweetened soft drinks caused weight gain; however, no trial in adults was longer than 10 weeks or included more than 41 participants. No trial reported the effects on lipids.
Although observational studies support the hypothesis that sugar-sweetened soft drinks cause weight gain, a paucity of hypothesis-confirming clinical trial data has left the issue open to debate. Given the magnitude of the public health concern, larger and longer intervention trials should be considered to clarify the specific effects of sugar-sweetened soft drinks on body weight and other cardiovascular risk factors.
近几十年来,美国软饮料的消费量增长了两倍,与此同时肥胖患病率也急剧上升。本临床综述的目的是评估现有科学证据在多大程度上支持含糖软饮料消费与体重增加之间的因果关系。
通过医学文献数据库(MEDLINE)检索1966年至2006年12月期间以所有语言发表的文章,其中包含关键词或医学副标题,如“软饮料”和“体重”。通过查阅检索到的文章的参考文献,包括最近的系统综述,获取了其他文章。所有包含人类横断面、前瞻性队列或临床试验数据的报告均被纳入考虑。
15项横断面研究中的6项以及10项前瞻性队列研究中的6项发现软饮料消费与体重增加之间存在统计学上的显著关联。有5项临床试验;其中两项涉及青少年的试验表明,减少含糖软饮料的摄入有助于减缓体重增加。在成年人中,3项小型实验研究表明,饮用含糖软饮料会导致体重增加;然而,没有一项针对成年人的试验超过10周,或纳入超过41名参与者。没有试验报告对血脂的影响。
尽管观察性研究支持含糖软饮料会导致体重增加这一假设,但缺乏证实该假设的临床试验数据,使得这一问题仍有待辩论。鉴于公共卫生问题的严重性,应考虑进行更大规模、更长时间的干预试验,以阐明含糖软饮料对体重和其他心血管危险因素的具体影响。