ClinicalTrials.Veeva

Menu

Resting-state Imaging and Chronic Consumption of Non-Nutritive SweetenerS (RNSS)

U

University Hospital, Clermont-Ferrand

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Healthy Volunteers - Male and Female

Treatments

Other: carrying out a MRI scan
Other: administration of questionnaires
Dietary Supplement: Can distribution visit for subjects in the "non/low" sweetener consumption group

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07183254
RBHP 2025 PICKERING

Details and patient eligibility

About

Non-nutritive sweeteners are used as a substitute for simple sugars to improve the palatability of food products without increasing their sugar and calorie content. They represent a global market of 7 billion euros, with an annual growth of 5%. Reducing their consumption therefore seems to be excluded. Some studies have focused on the impacts of these substances on brain activity. According to a recent study, continuous consumption of low doses of saccharin in adult mice significantly decreases the level of dopamine in the prefrontal cortex and significantly increases striatal dopamine, which modifies decision-making strategies. Resting-state functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (r-fMRI) studies in humans have also shown that an increase in striatal dopaminergic activity modifies the resting-state functional connectivity of brain regions linked to the reward circuit. r-fMRI allows the characterization of brain networks and the strength of correlations between brain regions, without any specific task being required. It is a rapid, non-invasive technique that can measure changes in brain functional connectivity.

In addition to r-fMRI, diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) is able to assess white matter microstructure and the integrity or otherwise of fiber tracts. Several parameters such as the fractional anisotropy (FA), coefficient of white matter, mean diffusivity, and radial diffusivity can be modified in the event of changes in functional connectivity, reflecting axonal rearrangements, not visible on conventional MRI sequences. Based on previous research, investigators hypothesize that (1) chronic consumption of non-nutritive artificial sweeteners increases striatal dopaminergic activity. (2) This modification is accompanied by changes in resting-state functional connectivity in brain regions of interest associated with the reward circuit in healthy young adults.

Then, the primary objective of this study is to compare, in the resting state, the differences in functional connectivity of brain regions of interest between "non/low consumers" and "high consumers" of sweeteners at the start of the study using r-fMRI.

The key secondary objective of this study is to assess changes in brain connectivity using r-fMRI in non- and low-consuming subjects before and after a transient increase in their sweetener consumption over 5 weeks.

The secondary objectives include assessing daily sugar consumption (5-week follow-up), daily consumption of non-energy-rich artificial sweeteners (5-week follow-up), Body Mass Index (BMI), physical activity level, and white matter microstructure and fibrous tract integrity using a diffusion-weighted MRI (DTI) sequence.

Full description

A single-center interventional study in 35 non- and low-consumers (approximately 8 mg/day) and 35 high-consumers (approximately 70 mg/day) selected, among other things, using a quantitative consumption frequency questionnaire on daily sugar and sweetener intake, whose frequency scale has been validated by a previous study.

The subjects recruited are healthy young adults, aged 18 to 30 years. An initial f-rMRI and DTI session will be performed for both groups (non- and low-consumers and high-consumers of sweeteners).

Then, a second session will be conducted after 5 weeks of nutritional intervention only in non- and low-consumers of sweeteners. During this period, subjects will be asked to consume 660 ml of sweetened carbonated beverages, the equivalent of 2 cans per day, with or without meals. They will also be asked to record their daily sugar and sweetener consumption, using an adapted version of the previously mentioned consumption frequency questionnaire, during this same period.

The study will observe initial differences in brain connectivity between non- and low-consumers and high-consumers of sweeteners, as well as changes in connectivity in non- and low-consumers before and after the nutritional intervention.

Comparison of functional connectivity between non- and low consumers and high consumers, as well as the change in connectivity before and after nutritional intervention in non- and low consumers will be performed by comparing connectivity matrices among all possible pairs of regions of interest, with a t-test for independent samples (between non- and low consumers and high consumers at t = 0) and dependent samples (non- and low consumers pre- and post-nutrition intervention; t = 0 and t = 5 weeks). Results will be expressed in terms of effect sizes and 95% confidence intervals.

At baseline (t = 0), the assessment of daily intake of simple sugars and BMI, as well as the level of physical activity, will be analyzed in relation to the consumption of non-nutritive artificial sweeteners, using a one-way ANOVA or a Kruskal-Wallis test, and a Chi-square test or a Fisher's exact test, respectively.

The assessment of intakes of simple sugars and non-nutritive artificial sweeteners during the 5 weeks of nutritional intervention (t = 5 weeks) in non- and low-consumers will be compared to the intakes of sugars and sweeteners estimated at t = 0, using a dependent-samples t-test or a Mann-Whitney test, if the conditions for applying the t-test are not met. The results will be expressed in terms of effect size and 95% confidence interval. To describe changes in white matter microstructure in non- and low-drinkers compared with high-drinkers, anisotropic fraction and ADC will be compared by Student's t-test or Mann-Whitney test. Results will be expressed as effect sizes and 95% confidence intervals.

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 30 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Men and women aged 18 to 30 (and in good health)
  • Having low or no sweetener consumption (~8 mg ± 5.05 mg/day) or high consumption (~80 mg ± 91.72 mg/day)
  • Having a BMI of 18.5 < 24.9
  • For young women: having effective contraception maintained throughout the study
  • Able to give informed consent to participate in the research
  • Affiliation to a Social Security scheme

Exclusion criteria

  • Refusing to participate in the research

  • With impaired understanding, according to the investigator

  • Volunteer under guardianship/curatorship/deprived of liberty or under legal protection

  • Incompatibility of healthy volunteers with the medical imaging center's safety criteria for conducting 3 Tesla MRI experiments

  • Presenting "contraindications" to an MRI examination without injection: presence of metal parts in the body (electronic devices such as a pacemaker, a neurostimulator, cochlear implant, prostheses, intraocular foreign bodies, etc.), claustrophobia, obesity

  • Refusal to be informed in the event of an incidental discovery of an abnormality on MRI

  • Volunteer with neurological disease, psychiatric or behavioral disorders*

  • Volunteer with addiction*:

    • Nicotine: smoker or former smoker of less than 12 months;
    • Alcoholism - "AUDIT" test: Female score ≥ 6 and male score ≥ 7;
    • Drugs - "DAST-10": Score ≥ 1;
    • Gambling - "ICJE": Score ≥ 3
    • Video games - Modified DSM IV Video Game Addiction Test: More than 4 positive responses. - Positive urine drug screen
  • Volunteer with an eating disorder (ED)*:

    o Eating disorder - "SCOFF": At least two positive responses. - Volunteers with at least one chronic condition (obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular, renal, or hepatic diseases, etc.)*

  • Pregnant or breastfeeding women, or healthy subjects wishing to conceive during the current study year*

  • Any illness, health condition, or history deemed incompatible with the trial by the investigator

  • Volunteers following a specific or highly restrictive diet (vegetarians, vegans, or vegans; multiple dietary exclusions related to religion, food allergies or intolerances; diets related to intensive exercise or weight-loss)*

  • Currently excluded from another study

  • Currently participating in another clinical trial, or in the exclusion period, or having received a total compensation amount exceeding €6,000 in the 12 months preceding the start of the trial,

    • This study is part of a larger research project, also involving cognitive tasks and the measurement of food preferences. These exclusion criteria were therefore added in order to standardize the profile of the participants.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Basic Science

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

100 participants in 2 patient groups

Subjects with low or no sweetener consumption, with a gender ratio close to 50/50
Experimental group
Description:
Subjects will be included: * Men and women aged 18 to 30 (and in good health) * Having low or no sweetener consumption (\~8 mg ± 5.05 mg/day) * Having a BMI of 18.5 \< 24.9 * For young women: having effective contraception maintained throughout the study * Able to give informed consent to participate in the research * Affiliation to a Social Security scheme
Treatment:
Other: carrying out a MRI scan
Dietary Supplement: Can distribution visit for subjects in the "non/low" sweetener consumption group
Other: administration of questionnaires
Other: carrying out a MRI scan
Subjects with high sweetener consumption, with a gender ratio close to 50/50
Experimental group
Description:
Subjects will be included: * Men and women aged 18 to 30 (and in good health) * Having high sweetener consumption (\~80 mg ± 91.72 mg/day) * Having a BMI of 18.5 \< 24.9 * For young women: having effective contraception maintained throughout the study * Able to give informed consent to participate in the research * Affiliation to a Social Security scheme
Treatment:
Other: carrying out a MRI scan
Other: administration of questionnaires
Other: carrying out a MRI scan

Trial contacts and locations

1

Loading...

Central trial contact

Lise Laclautre

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

Clinical trials

Find clinical trialsTrials by location
© Copyright 2026 Veeva Systems