Oligomalt, a New Slowly Digestible Carbohydrate, Is Well Tolerated in Healthy Young Men and Women at Intakes Up to 180 Gram per Day: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Crossover Trial
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Published:2023-06-15
Issue:12
Volume:15
Page:2752
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ISSN:2072-6643
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Container-title:Nutrients
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Nutrients
Author:
Johansen Odd Erik1ORCID, Curti Delphine2, von Eynatten Maximilian1, Rytz Andreas3ORCID, Lahiry Anirban3ORCID, Delodder Frederik3, Ufheil Gerhard45, D’Urzo Carmine1, Orengo Audrey2, Thorne Kate1, Lerea-Antes Jaclyn S.56
Affiliation:
1. Nestlé Health Science, 1000 Lausanne, Switzerland 2. Société des Produits Nestlé, 1000 Lausanne, Switzerland 3. Nestlé Research, Clinical Research Unit, 1000 Lausanne, Switzerland 4. Nestlé Research and Development Konolfingen, Société des Produits Nestlé S.A., 3510 Konolfingen, Switzerland 5. Nestlé Product Technology Center NHS, Société des Produits Nestlé S.A., Bridgewater, NJ 08807, USA 6. Nestlé Health Science, Bridgewater, NJ 08807, USA
Abstract
In this randomized, double-blind triple-crossover study (NCT05142137), the digestive tolerance and safety of a novel, slowly digestible carbohydrate (SDC), oligomalt, an α-1,3/α-1,6-glucan α-glucose-based polymer, was assessed in healthy adults over three separate 7-day periods, comparing a high dose of oligomalt (180 g/day) or a moderate dose of oligomalt (80 g/day in combination with 100 g maltodextrin/day) with maltodextrin (180 g/day), provided as four daily servings in 300 mL of water with a meal. Each period was followed by a one-week washout. A total of 24 subjects (15 females, age 34 years, BMI 22.2 kg/m2, fasting blood glucose 4.9 mmol/L) were recruited, of whom 22 completed the course. The effects on the primary endpoint (the Gastrointestinal Symptom Rating Score (GSRS)) showed a statistically significant dose dependency, albeit of limited clinical relevance, between a high dose of oligomalt and maltodextrin (mean (95% CI) 2.29 [2.04, 2.54] vs. 1.59 [1.34, 1.83], respectively; difference: [−1.01, −0.4], p < 0.0001), driven by the GSRS-subdomains “Indigestion” and “Abdominal pain”. The GSRS difference ameliorated with product exposure, and the GSRS in those who received high-dose oligomalt as their third intervention period was similar to pre-intervention (mean ± standard deviation: 1.6 ± 0.4 and 1.4 ± 0.3, respectively). Oligomalt did not have a clinically meaningful impact on the Bristol Stool Scale, and it did not cause serious adverse events. These results support the use of oligomalt across various doses as an SDC in healthy, normal weight, young adults.
Funder
Nestlé Health Science (NHSc), 1800 Vevey, Switzerland
Subject
Food Science,Nutrition and Dietetics
Reference29 articles.
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