N/A
N=181
Study Of Drinks With Artificial Sweeteners in People With Type 2 Diabetes
Type 2 Diabetes
Bottom Line
View on ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT03944616 ↗Enrolled (actual)
181
Serious AEs
0.0%
Results posted
Sep 2025
Primary outcome: Primary: HbA1c — 7.19; 7.20; 7.13; 7.43 Hba1c(%)
Study Design & Population
- Study type
- Interventional
- Phase
- N/A
- Interventions
- Diet Beverage (Behavioral); Water (Behavioral)
- Age
- Adult, Older Adult · 35+ yrs
- Sex
- All
- Sponsor
- University of California, Irvine
- Primary completion
- Mar 2024
Outcome Measures
| Outcome | Result | p-value |
|---|---|---|
| PRIMARY HbA1c |
7.19; 7.20; 7.13; 7.43; 7.14; 7.44 | — |
| SECONDARY Time In Range |
76.0; 72.3; 75.2; 66.9; 72.8; 64.7 | — |
| SECONDARY Glycemic Variability |
39.6; 42.0; 40.0; 44.9; 40.8; 45.8 | — |
| SECONDARY Mean Glucose (mg/dl) |
147.3; 151.4; 149.4; 161.2; 153.1; 162.3 | — |
| SECONDARY Fasting Glucose |
147.5; 147.6; 146.2; 149.3; 149.2; 153.7 | — |
| SECONDARY Fasting Insulin (Pmol/L) |
128.0; 138.5; 135.7; 134.2; 143.5; 144.2 | — |
| SECONDARY Fructosamine |
273.2; 285.5; 272.1; 286.6; 273.0; 291.6 | — |
| SECONDARY Weight (kg) |
102.1; 96.1; 101.5; 95.8; 101.2; 95.9 | — |
| SECONDARY Total Cholesterol (mg/dL) |
165.9; 163.6; 164.8; 163.6; 161.1; 163.4 | — |
| SECONDARY Kidney Function |
83.2; 81.5; 82.8; 80.8; 82.0; 80.9 | — |
| SECONDARY Systolic Blood Pressure |
136.3; 131.9; 135.5; 129.5; 135.6; 129.6 | — |
| SECONDARY Diastolic Blood Pressure |
78.5; 76.6; 78.3; 75.4; 77.7; 75.6 | — |
| SECONDARY Apolipoprotein-AI |
146.6; 150.3; 148.0; 151.0; 147.2; 152.7 | — |
| SECONDARY Apolipoprotein B |
88.0; 85.0; 88.0; 86.6; 85.4; 86.8 | — |
| SECONDARY Fibrinogen (mg/dL) |
265.0; 269.3; 268.7; 263.1; 270.4; 265.4 | — |
| SECONDARY C-reactive Protein |
3.93; 3.54; 3.60; 3.56; 3.85; 3.53 | — |
| SECONDARY Aspartate Aminotransferase (AST) (U/L) |
21.9; 24.9; 22.5; 23.9; 21.9; 23.9 | — |
| SECONDARY Aminotransferase (ALT) (U/L) |
26.6; 28.2; 26.8; 27.1; 26.6; 26.3 | — |
| SECONDARY Alkaline Phosphatase (ALKPhos ) (U/L) |
88.0; 83.3; 90.1; 82.6; 88.7; 83.4 | — |
| SECONDARY Thyroid Stimulating Hormone (TSH) |
2.45; 2.17; 2.65; 2.32; 2.36; 2.27 | — |
| SECONDARY Dietary Quality (Healthy Eating Index -HEI) |
54.7; 53.7; 54.8; 53.1; 53.3; 51.7 | — |
| SECONDARY The Diabetes Health Profile (DHP-18) |
79.6; 77.9; 79.8; 78.1; 80.6; 78.6 | — |
| SECONDARY Food Craving Inventory (FCI) |
33.9; 35.4; 29.8; 30.9; 27.1; 31.2 | — |
| SECONDARY The Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI) |
6.0; 6.8; 6.0; 6.5; 5.9; 7.1 | — |
| SECONDARY Medication Effect Score (MES) |
1.64; 2.09; 1.64; 2.05; 1.63; 2.03 | — |
| SECONDARY Therapeutic Intensity Score (TIS) |
0.41; 0.42; 0.40; 0.41; 0.42; 0.42 | — |
Summary
Diet beverages sweetened with artificial sweeteners occupy a unique category in the food environment as they are a source of intensely sweet taste with no calories. Diet beverages are the single largest contributor to artificial sweetener intake in the U.S. diet, and people with diabetes are the highest consumers of diet beverages, tending to consume them as a replacement for dietary sources of sugar, especially in place of sugar-sweetened beverages. This behavior has been endorsed by dietetic and scientific organizations, and diet beverages are marketed as being synonymous with better health, suitable for weight loss, and thus advantageous for diabetes control. The underlying public health concern is that there are few data to support or refute the benefit or harm of habitual diet beverage consumption by people with diabetes; therefore randomized trials with relevant outcomes must be conducted because they would address many limitations of previous research and have major implications for dietary recommendations on diet beverage intake and primary and secondary prevention of chronic disease. To begin addressing this important scientific gap the investigators are testing the effect of diet beverage intake on diabetes control parameters in free-living adults with type 2 diabetes in a randomized, two arm parallel trial with a run-in period of 2-weeks and an active intervention period of 24-weeks. This study will recruit 200 patients with type 2 diabetes who are usual consumers of commercial diet beverages and randomize them to receive and consume either: 1) A commercial diet beverage of choice (3 servings or 24 oz. daily); or 2) Unflavored bottled water of choice (sparkling or plain) (3 servings or 24 oz. daily). The primary outcome will be a central measure of clinical diabetes control in glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c). The study will also measure the nature and magnitude of glycemic excursions via continuous glucose monitors, as well as clinical markers of cardiometabolic risk and kidney function. Lastly, investigators will measure plausible mechanisms whereby diet beverage intake may alter risk by assessing the effect of diet beverage intake on the functional composition of the gut microbiome via stool samples and comprehensive metabolomics, satiety hormones, as well as usual dietary intake, and upstream behavioral pathways which may inform dietary intake patterns.
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion criteria: We will include men, women and non-binary participants with T2D, age 35 years and older, able to provide informed consent, otherwise healthy, who meet the following criteria:
- Physician diagnosed type 2 diabetes ≥ 6 months prior to screening
- HbA1c 6.5-8.5% at participant screening
- Current treatment with lifestyle changes or stable diabetes-related medication levels for the past 3 months
- Willingness to provide consent to contact treating physician and physician agreement to refrain from changing diabetes-related medications during the trial (change defined as > 2 fold change in dose of any 1 hyperglycemic agent or addition or subtraction of an agent)
- No physician-directed medication change for 3 months if prescribed medication for lipids or blood pressure
- Usual consumers of diet beverages (≥ 3 servings/ week (24 oz.) and the willingness to maintain fidelity of the intervention, and participate in all aspects of the intervention
- Not actively looking to make major lifestyle alterations during the study period with stable weight for 2 months (within 3%).
Exclusion Criteria
- Type 1 diabetes or suspected type 1 diabetes (lean with polyuria, polydipsia, and weight loss with little response to metformin)
- "Secondary" diabetes due to specific causes (e.g. monogenic syndromes, pancreatic surgery, and pancreatitis)
- Diabetic Ketoacidosis hospitalization within last 6 months
- Severe/major hypoglycemia in the last 3 months-severe/major hypoglycemia is defined as a hypoglycemic event in which patient requires assistance of another person to manage the episode
- Glucocorticoid use (prednisone 2.5 mg/d or more or its equivalent)
- History of intolerance or allergy to diet beverages or AS or phenylketonuria
- Any condition that is known to affect the validity of the glycemic measures (Hba1c)
- Major cardiovascular disease event or surgery within past 6 months
- Gastrointestinal disease
- Renal or liver disease
- Current treatment for cancer
- Those with major surgery planned or history of bariatric surgery
- Antibiotic treatment (> 6 days) within past 6 months
- Currently pregnant (via self-report) or planning to become pregnant during study period; 2 drinks/day for women and >3 drinks/day for men)
- Habitual consumer of SSB ≥ 1 serving / day (8 oz.)
- Does not drink diet beverages
- BMI < 20.0 kg/m2
Data sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT03944616). Outcome figures and adverse-event rates are extracted automatically from the registry's posted results and are provided for clinician reference, not as a substitute for the primary publication.