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Reducing Sugar-sweetened Beverage Consumption Among Children

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Pediatric Obesity
Diet, Food, and Nutrition
Interventions
Behavioral: Regular soda
Behavioral: Commercially-available caffeine-free soda
Behavioral: Carbonated water
Registration Number
NCT04025060
Lead Sponsor
George Washington University
Brief Summary

Lowering sugar-sweetened beverage (SSB) consumption is a central component of lifestyle behavior change aimed at preventing and managing obesity, yet effective reduction of SSB intakes has been met with many challenges. While their palatability, accessibility, publicity, affordability, and social acceptability contribute to frequent and sustained SSB consumption, their caffeine and sugar content may further encourage continued intake. Although adverse health consequences of excessive SSB consumption are well documented, the extent to which their pleasant taste (due primarily to their sugar content) and post-ingestive effects (due to their sugar and/or caffeine content) positively reinforce consumption among children has not been elucidated. The purpose of this study is to conduct a pilot intervention to examine the feasibility of removing caffeinated SSBs from the child diet and to explore whether caffeinated SSB removal induces withdrawal symptoms in 8-11 (3rd-5th grade) year old children. Participants will be randomly assigned to replace their usual caffeinated SSB consumption with either caffeinated SSBs, caffeine-free SSBs or sparkling water provided by the study team for two weeks.

Detailed Description

Sugar-sweetened beverages (SSBs) significantly contribute to sugar and calorie intakes, and their consumption is associated with metabolic disease. Sweetened beverages also account for the majority of pediatric caffeine consumption. It is well-established that habitual caffeine use leads to dependence in adults and evidence for sugar dependence has been documented. However, caffeine and/or sugar dependence related to sweetened beverage consumption has not been evaluated, and determinants of their consumption among youth are severely understudied. It is critical to elucidate whether they may be physiologically or psychologically dependent on these beverages, particularly SSBs, which contain both caffeine and sugar.

The purpose of this study is to conduct a pilot study where caffeinated SSB's are replaced with caffeinated SSBs provided by the study team (control) or with caffeine-free and unsweetened alternatives (also provided by the study team) for 2 weeks, among children who habitually consume caffeinated SSBs.

Lowering SSB consumption is a central component of lifestyle behavior change aimed at preventing and managing obesity, yet effective reduction of SSB intakes has been met with many challenges. While their palatability, accessibility, publicity, affordability, and social acceptability contribute to frequent and sustained SSB consumption, their caffeine and sugar content may further encourage continued intake. Although adverse health consequences of excessive SSB consumption are well documented, the extent to which their pleasant taste (due primarily to their sugar content) and post-ingestive effects (due to their sugar and/or caffeine content) positively reinforce consumption among children has not been elucidated. This is particularly important to study among children from low-income and minority backgrounds, as these children have the highest rates of SSB intake and the highest prevalence of obesity.

Specific Aims and Hypotheses:

1. Examine the feasibility of an intervention to remove caffeinated SSB from the child diet. We hypothesize that caffeinated SSB avoidance will be feasible among children, but that compliance will be lowest among those assigned to sparkling water, devoid of both caffeine and sugar. Compliance with beverage assignments will be assessed using daily online questionnaires and weekly dietary recalls.

2. Explore the extent to which caffeinated SSB removal induces withdrawal symptoms. We hypothesize that replacement of caffeinated SSBs with caffeine-free SSBs, or sparkling water will induce withdrawal symptoms compared to control (usual caffeinated SSB consumption). Participants will complete a child-adapted version of the validated Caffeine Withdrawal Symptoms Questionnaire (CWSQ) at baseline and daily (online) during the intervention.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
29
Inclusion Criteria
  • Reports regular consumption of caffeinated sugar-sweetened beverages, defined as consuming ≥ 12 ounces of caffeinated SSB's per day
Exclusion Criteria
  • Poorly managed chronic medical condition; current or prior eating order diagnosis; asthma requiring medication in past three months; history of migraines; regular consumption (≥ 1 serving per week) of other caffeinated beverages, such as energy drinks, regular coffee, or hot tea

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Regular SodaRegular sodaConsumption of regular soda daily for two weeks
Caffeine-free SodaCommercially-available caffeine-free sodaConsumption of caffeine-free soda daily for two weeks
Carbonated WaterCarbonated waterConsumption of unsweetened, carbonated water daily for two weeks
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
AdherenceTwo weeks

Adherence will be assessed by summing the number of study beverages consumed each day over the course of the intervention.

Withdrawal SymptomsAverage withdrawal scores over first 72 hours of intervention

We will assess caffeine withdrawal symptoms using a child-adapted version of the validated caffeine withdrawal symptoms questionnaire (CWSQ). Participant responses to the CWSQ are on a Likert scale, where a score of "0" is not at all and "4" is "extremely"

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Milken Institute School of Public Health and GW Medical Faculty Associates

🇺🇸

Washington, District of Columbia, United States

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