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Sucralose & Immunotherapy: How Artificial Sweetener Impacts Cancer Treatment

Sucralose & Immunotherapy: How Artificial Sweetener Impacts Cancer Treatment
Payal Dhar 2025-08-12 13:00:00

Patients with certain types ⁢of cancers​ who consume sucralose, found in‌ the ⁣artificial sweetener⁢ Splenda,⁣ respond worse to immunotherapy ⁣compared with those who don’t, ‌researchers report July 30⁣ in⁢ cancer ​Revelation. But supplementing⁤ diets with the amino acid arginine might mitigate these‍ effects, thay say.

The findings add to a growing​ body of research showing that ⁣ the gut microbiome — the vast community ⁤of microbes living in our digestive system —⁤ plays a crucial role in how well cancer treatments work.⁤ In this case, ‍sucralose appears to disrupt beneficial ‍gut bacteria ⁢that‍ help support immune function, including T cells, the ‌mainstay of our immune system.

“What’s new in this study is that ‌sucralose is promoting​ a microbiome that has few of the beneficial bacteria and more of the ⁣not so useful ones,” says Magdalena Plebanski,an immunologist at RMIT University ​in‌ Melbourne,Australia,who⁣ wasn’t part of the study. ‍“[And that] ​ sucralose could potentially be negatively affecting T cells ⁢directly.”

Previous‌ research‍ suggested that sucralose affects⁢ immunotherapy,‌ but the⁤ underlying ​mechanism ‍had not been clear. To investigate further, immunologist⁣ Abby Overacre and colleagues examined the gut microbiome in mice that were⁢ fed sucralose at levels equivalent to what humans might consume.

“Artificial ​sweeteners reduced [gut microbiome] ​diversity, and along with that, ⁣reduced overall levels of ‌arginine,” says Overacre, of ⁤the University⁢ of Pittsburgh. ‌“Arginine is very important for ⁢immune cell function, especially in cancer.”

The‌ mice had been bred to have the‍ same types of cancers as the​ human patients. Those fed sucralose showed⁣ reduced responsiveness to immunotherapy, but mice given regular table sugar responded just fine, overacre says.

To see​ how this translated to humans, the researchers surveyed 132 patients with advanced ⁣melanoma or non-small ​cell lung cancer ​who⁣ were ⁢receiving ⁤ anti-PD1 therapy, a kind of immunotherapy​ that targets a pathway⁤ used by cancer ‍cells to evade the⁢ immune⁢ system. Patients filled out detailed questionnaires about their diets, including the consumption of artificial⁢ sweeteners.

Even ⁤small ​amounts⁣ of‌ sucralose appeared to ‍have an ⁣adverse effect on immunotherapy response.

“[we] identified a cutoff of approximately⁤ 0.07 milligrams per kilogram of body weight that segregated patients who did poorly compared to patients who didn’t,” says ‌medical oncologist Diwakar Davar of⁢ the ⁢University ‍of⁤ Pittsburgh, ​another of⁣ the study’s authors. He notes that ⁢this level is well below the U.S.Food and Drug Management’s recommended daily limit for sucralose consumption — 5 ⁣milligrams per kilogram, ⁣or about‌ 22 cans of diet Mountain Dew⁢ for a 70-kilogram ⁢male.

Despite the small quantities involved, Overacre advises patients undergoing immunotherapy not to panic by⁢ “throwing away everything ⁢in your kitchen.” Adding an arginine or citrulline supplement, which​ boosts arginine, is easy, she says.

Clinical oncology pharmacist Andrew Ruplin is a⁢ bit⁤ more measured noting that patients should discuss the implications ‌of these findings‌ with their oncologists​ to make appropriate decisions⁢ about supplementation.

The ‍“data joins a growing body of evidence ​that the benefits and risks of ‌immunotherapy⁣ may be altered ⁢by individual patient behaviors that were completely ⁤unknown to us previously,” ⁢says ruplin of the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center in Seattle, but he would like to see additional prospective‍ human trials, with larger numbers of ⁢patients and⁢ different cancers included before implementing the findings in ‍treatment.

The⁣ researchers ​hope to launch clinical trials to investigate whether‍ supplements can improve both the gut microbiome and antitumor immune response‌ in patients. They ⁣also want to look at the ‍impact of other sugar substitutes ​on​ immunotherapy.

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