How sucrose, the ‘real’ sugar commonly found in sodas, can disrupt your appetite

Sugar-sweetened drinks interfere with the hunger-suppressing hormones that signal a sense of feeling full, a new USC study finds.

(Originally posted at USC News.)

By Leigh Hopper

How sucrose, the ‘real’ sugar commonly found in sodas, can disrupt your appetite

A recent study looks into why sugar-sweetened drinks are bad for us. (Photo/Jeff Wasserman, Stocksy United)

Sugary drinks interfere with hormones that tell the body “I feel full,” potentially contributing to obesity and undermining weight loss efforts, a new USC study shows.

The findings, which appear Thursday in the Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism, strengthen the case against sugar-sweetened beverages, a significant driver of obesity. Sugary drinks are the single largest source of calories from added sugar for American adults.

“Our study found that when young adults consumed drinks containing sucrose, they produced lower levels of appetite-regulating hormones than when they consumed drinks containing glucose — the main type of sugar that circulates in the bloodstream,” said Kathleen Page, an associate professor of medicine specializing in diabetes and childhood obesity at the Keck School of Medicine of USC.

The impact on hormone signaling was even greater among women who were already obese, as well as men, regardless of whether they were obese or not.

Sugar-sweetened foods, beverages can lead to lower amounts of appetite-regulating hormones

The study included 69 young adults ages 18 to 35 who participated in two study visits where they consumed drinks containing either sucrose or glucose. Sucrose, a combination of glucose and fructose, comes from sugar cane or sugar beets. Glucose is found in honey, grapes, figs and plums.

Participants gave blood samples at 10, 35 and 120 minutes after drinking the drinks. Researchers found that when the participants consumed drinks containing sucrose, they produced lower amounts of hormones that suppress hunger compared to when they consumed drinks containing an equal dose of glucose.

They also found that individual characteristics, including body weight and sex, affected the hormone responses to the different sugars. For example, people with obesity and those with lower insulin sensitivity had a smaller rise in hunger-suppressing hormones after consuming drinks sweetened with sucrose compared to glucose.

Page, who leads the Diabetes & Obesity Research Institute at USC, said the takeaway for the general public isn’t to switch from one sweet drink to another but to try to reduce added sugar altogether.

“The majority of sucrose that people consume in the American diet comes from sugar-sweetened foods and beverages, whereas glucose is found naturally in most carbohydrate-containing foods, including fruits and whole-grain breads,” she said. “I would advise reducing the consumption of sugar-sweetened foods and beverages and instead trying to eat more whole foods, like fruits.”


Other authors of the study include Alexandra G. Yunker, Sabrina Jones, Brendan Angelo, Alexis DeFendis, Trevor A. Pickering, Shan Luo, Hilary M. Dorton and Jasmin M. Alves, all of the Keck School of Medicine; and John R. Monterosso, of the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.

The study was supported by grants from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, part of the National Institutes of Health (R01DK102794), and the Southern California Clinical and Translational Science Institute (NIH UL1TR001855).