A review of the effectiveness of aspartame in helping with weight control
A. de la Hunty1, S. Gibson2 and M.
Ashwell1,3
1 Ashwell Associates (Europe) Ltd, Ashwell,
Hertfordshire, UK
2 SiG-Nurture Ltd, Guildford, Surrey, UK
3 Oxford
Brookes University, Headington Campus, Oxford, UK
Strategies to reverse the upward trend in obesity rates need to focus on both
reducing energy intake and increasing energy expenditure. The provision of low-
or reduced-energy-dense foods is one way of helping people to reduce their
energy intake and so enable weight maintenance or weight loss to occur. The use
of intense sweeteners as a substitute for sucrose potentially offers one way of
helping people to reduce the energy density of their diet without any loss of
palatability. This report reviews the evidence for the effect of aspartame on
weight loss, weight maintenance and energy intakes in adults and addresses the
question of how much energy is compensated for and whether the use of
aspartame-sweetened foods and drinks is an effective way to lose weight.
All studies which examined the effect of substituting sugar with either
aspartame alone or aspartame in combination with other intense sweeteners on
energy intake or bodyweight were identified. Studies which were not randomised
controlled trials in healthy adults and which did not measure energy intakes for
at least 24 h (for those with energy intakes as an outcome measure) were
excluded from the analysis. A minimum of 24-h energy intake data was set as the
cut-off to ensure that the full extent of any compensatory effects was seen. A
total of 16 studies were included in the analysis. Of these 16 studies, 15 had
energy intake as an outcome measure. The studies which used soft drinks as the
vehicle for aspartame used between 500 and about 2000 ml which is equivalent to
about two to six cans or bottles of soft drinks every day.
A significant reduction in energy intakes was seen with aspartame compared
with all types of control except when aspartame was compared with non-sucrose
controls such as water. The most relevant comparisons are the parallel design
studies which compare the effects of aspartame with sucrose. These had an
overall effect size of 0.4 standardised difference (SD). This corresponds to a
mean reduction of about 10% of energy intake. At an average energy intake of 9.3
MJ/day (average of adult men and women aged 19-50 years) this is a deficit of
0.93 MJ/day (222 kcal/ day or 1560 kcal/week), which would be predicted (using
an energy value for obese tissue of 7500 kcal/kg) to result in a weight loss of
around 0.2 kg/week with a confidence interval 50% either side of this
estimate.
Information on the extent of compensation was available for 12 of the 15
studies. The weighted average of these figures was 32%. Compensation is likely
to vary with a number of factors such as the size of the caloric deficit, the
type of food or drink manipulated, and timescale. An estimate of the amount of
compensation with soft drinks was calculated from the four studies which used
soft drinks only as the vehicle. A weighted average of these figures was 15.5%.
A significant reduction in weight was seen. The combined effect figure of 0.2 SD
is a conservative figure as it excludes comparisons where the controls gained
weight because of their high-sucrose diet and the long-term follow-up data in
which the aspartame groups regained less weight than the control group. An
effect of 0.2 SD corresponds to about a 3% reduction in bodyweight (2.3 kg for
an adult weighing 75 kg). Given the weighted average study length was 12 weeks,
this gives an estimated rate of weight loss of around 0.2 kg/week for a 75-kg
adult.
The meta-analyses demonstrate that using foods and drinks sweetened with
aspartame instead of sucrose results in a significant reduction in both energy
intakes and bodyweight. Meta-analyses both of energy intake and of weight loss
produced an estimated rate of weight loss of about 0.2 kg/week. This close
agreement between the figure calculated from reductions in energy intake and
actual measures of weight loss gives confidence that this is a true effect. The
two meta-analyses used different sets of studies with widely differing designs
and controls. Although this makes comparisons between them difficult, it
suggests that the final figure of around 0.2 kg/week is robust and is applicable
to the variety of ways aspartame-containing foods are used by consumers.
This review has shown that using foods and drinks sweetened with aspartame
instead of those sweetened with sucrose is an effective way to maintain and lose
weight without reducing the palatability of the diet. The decrease in energy
intakes and the rate of weight loss that can reasonably be achieved is low but
meaningful and, on a population basis, more than sufficient to counteract the
current average rate of weight gain of around 0.007 kg/week. On an individual
basis, it provides a useful adjunct to other weight loss regimes.
Some compensation for the substituted energy does occur but this is only
about one-third of the energy replaced and is probably less when using soft
drinks sweetened with aspartame. Nevertheless, these compensation values are
derived from short-term studies. More data are needed over the longer term to
determine whether a tolerance to the effects is acquired.
To achieve the average rate of weight loss seen in these studies of 0.2
kg/week will require around a 220-kcal (0.93 MJ) deficit per day based on an
energy value for obese tissue of 7500 kcal/kg. Assuming the higher rate of
compensation (32%), this would require the substitution of around 330 kcal/day
(1.4 MJ/day) from sucrose with aspartame (which is equivalent to around 88 g of
sucrose). Using the lower estimated rate of compensation for soft drinks alone
(15.5%) would require the substitution of about 260 kcal/day (1.1 MJ/day) from
sucrose with aspartame. This is equivalent to 70 g of sucrose or about two cans
of soft drinks every day.
Nutrition Bulletin, 31, 115-128 (2006)