Low-calorie sweeteners and health outcomes: an evaluation of rapid versus traditional evidence mapping

BMC Res Notes. 2022 Feb 19;15(1):65. doi: 10.1186/s13104-022-05926-3.

Abstract

Objective: Scientific evidence related to environmental exposures continues to mount. Tools such as evidence mapping support decision making, but can be resource- and time-intensive. We explored "rapid evidence mapping" to efficiently map scientific evidence using rigorous and transparent methodologies. We undertook a proof-of-concept case study on the topic of low-calorie sweeteners. Our intent was to conduct a traditional evidence map based on the same evidence base from a prior rapid evidence map case study to compare approaches, findings, and conclusions. We searched the literature, screened full text of studies, manually tagged and categorized articles, and created visualizations to map the evidence.

Results: We conducted full-text screening of studies from the prior rapid evidence map and identified 255 relevant studies. Our findings corroborated those of the rapid evidence map, identifying most studies as short-term conducted in healthy individuals studying outcomes of appetite, energy sensing and body weight. We identified gaps in research areas related to outcomes of appetite and dietary intake, particularly in study populations with diabetes. Our findings illustrate the promise of rapid evidence mapping as a rigorous approach that can summarize scientific evidence, identify knowledge gaps, and identify areas for a future systematic review in a time-efficient manner.

Keywords: Artificial sweeteners; Evidence map; Evidence-based methodology; Low-calorie sweeteners; Rapid evidence mapping; Systematic review.

MeSH terms

  • Appetite
  • Body Weight
  • Energy Intake*
  • Health Status
  • Humans
  • Sweetening Agents*

Substances

  • Sweetening Agents