Diet soda linked to higher infant weight
Artificially sweetened beverages in pregnancy tied to higher infant weight
May 9, 2016
By Kathryn Doyle
(Reuters
Health) – - Women who drank artificially sweetened beverages like diet
soda every day while pregnant were more likely a year later to have
infants with a higher body mass index (BMI), according to a new study.
The
researchers did not find a link between sugary beverages during
pregnancy and babies’ BMI, which is a measure of weight in relation to
height.
They
did see an association with the total amount of sugar a pregnant woman
consumes every day, “but no extra effect of sugary beverages,” said lead
author Meghan B. Azad of Children’s Hospital Research Institute of
Manitoba in Winnipeg, Canada.
“There’s
growing evidence in adults that artificial sweeteners may have
counterintuitive relations with weight gain,” Azad told Reuters Health
by phone.
The
researchers studied more than 3,000 mother and infant pairs from a
long-term Canadian study, which recruited pregnant women between 2009
and 2012. The women completed dietary questionnaires in the second or
third trimester of pregnancy.
Almost
30 percent of women said they consumed some artificially sweetened
beverages during pregnancy, and five percent said they did so at least
once a day. More than 20 percent said they drank at least one
sugar-sweetened beverage per day.
The
babies’ height and weight were measured when they were a year old.
About 5 percent of the infants were overweight for their age.
After
accounting for the mothers’ weight, diet quality and calorie intake,
infants whose mothers drank artificial sweeteners on a daily basis
during pregnancy were twice as likely to be overweight as those whose
mothers did not drink any artificial sweeteners, the research team
reported in JAMA Pediatrics.
Artificial sweeteners can pass from mother to child via breast milk, Azad said.
“Women
consuming (the) most artificial sweeteners were most likely to be obese
or have diabetes, so we had to correct for that,” but the association
remained, Azad said.
Although
this study only included diet soda and sweeteners in tea or coffee,
these sweeteners can also be found in energy drinks, juices and teas,
said Mark A. Pereira of the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, who
coauthored an editorial alongside the new study.
“Five
artificial sweeteners have been deemed safe for human consumption by
the U.S. (Food and Drug Administration) on the basis of the available
evidence from animal and human studies, including acesulfame potassium,
aspartame, saccharin, sucralose, and neotame,” Pereira told Reuters
Health by email. “Stevia (rebaudioside A or rebiana) is extracted from
the Stevia plant, so it is not an artificial sweetener.”
But even though they are FDA-approved, women should avoid these sweeteners during pregnancy, he said.
This study doesn’t prove causation yet, only that there is some link between these beverages and infant BMI, Azad said.
“It’s not time to ban them or tell everyone not to consume them, but it does raise a question,” she said.
Many pregnant women already try to avoid artificial sweeteners, she said.
Infant
BMI may not be the best measure of current and future health, although
BMI is tied to health outcomes like diabetes, Azad said. The infants in
this study have now turned three years old and will be reassessed at age
five to see if the pattern persisted.
“I
would have expected sugar-sweetened beverages to also be linked to BMI
as that is typically found in studies of children and adults,” Pereira
said. “And, I am suspicious about whether artificially sweetened
beverages really impact obesity risk in a causal way.”
People
who consume a lot of artificially sweetened beverages tend to be
overweight or obese to start with, which may have an effect, he said.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1Zxzf2S JAMA Pediatrics, online May 9, 2016.
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