Metabolic Effects and Safety Aspects of Acute D-allulose and Erythritol Administration in Healthy Subjects

Author:

Teysseire FabienneORCID,Bordier ValentineORCID,Budzinska AleksandraORCID,Van Oudenhove LukasORCID,Weltens Nathalie,Beglinger Christoph,Wölnerhanssen Bettina K.ORCID,Meyer-Gerspach Anne ChristinORCID

Abstract

The rapid increase in sugar consumption is associated with various negative metabolic and inflammatory effects; therefore, alternative sweeteners become of interest. The aim of this study was to investigate the metabolic effects and safety aspects of acute D-allulose and erythritol on glucose, insulin, ghrelin, blood lipids, uric acid, and high-sensitive C-reactive protein (hsCRP). In three study visits, 18 healthy subjects received an intragastric administration of 25 g D-allulose or 50 g erythritol, or 300 mL tap water (placebo) in a randomized, double-blind and crossover order. To measure the aforementioned parameters, blood samples were drawn at fixed time intervals. Glucose and insulin concentrations were lower after D-allulose compared to tap water (p = 0.001, dz = 0.91 and p = 0.005, dz = 0.58, respectively); however, Bayesian models show no difference for insulin in response to D-allulose compared to tap water, and there was no effect after erythritol. An exploratory analysis showed that ghrelin concentrations were reduced after erythritol compared to tap water (p = 0.026, dz = 0.59), with no effect after D-allulose; in addition, both sweeteners had no effect on blood lipids, uric acid and hsCRP. This combination of properties identifies both sweeteners as excellent candidates for effective and safe sugar alternatives.

Funder

Swiss National Science Foundation and the Research Foundation Flanders

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics

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