Reviewed clinical summary · Source-linked · Educational use only

Does Orange Juice Spike Blood Sugar at Breakfast in Type 2 Diabetes?

Clinical Bottom Line

A crossover trial finds orange juice with breakfast raises glucose no more than whole orange or a sugary drink of matched sugar in well-controlled type 2 diabetes. PICO summary and commentary.

Summary: In a crossover trial in people with well-controlled type 2 diabetes, drinking 100% orange juice with a high-carbohydrate breakfast produced no greater glucose or insulin rise than eating an equivalent whole orange or drinking a sugar-sweetened beverage of matched sugar content.

PICO Summary

ElementDetail
Population15 adults with well-controlled type 2 diabetes (mean HbA1c 6.6%); Belgium.
Intervention250 mL of 100% orange juice with a standardised high-carbohydrate breakfast.
ComparisonWhole orange pieces or a sugar-sweetened orange-flavoured beverage, all with identical total sugar.
OutcomeNo significant difference in postprandial glucose or insulin (total or incremental AUC, or peak) over 4 hours, and no difference in capillary glucose, between the three conditions (all p>0.05).

Expert Commentary

This is a small but useful study that complicates a common assumption. Patients with diabetes are often told that fruit juice is metabolically dangerous while whole fruit is safe, yet here, when total sugar was matched and all three drinks were taken alongside a high-carbohydrate meal, the acute glucose and insulin responses were indistinguishable, whether the sugar came from 100% juice, whole orange, or a sweetened drink. The likely explanation is that the large carbohydrate load of the breakfast dominated the response, swamping any modest difference the fibre in whole fruit might otherwise make. I would keep the interpretation narrow. Fifteen well-controlled patients, a single acute test, and matched-sugar conditions tell us about one meal, not about habitual intake, where the calories and fructose load of regularly drinking juice may still matter for weight and triglycerides. Can I use this with my patients? Yes, with nuance. I can reassure a patient that a glass of juice with a meal is not the catastrophe it is sometimes painted as, while still advising that whole fruit is preferable overall and that sugary drinks between meals are best limited. Context, not just sugar content, shapes the glucose response.

References

Verboven K, Van Ryckeghem L, Schweiggert R, et al. Acute glycaemic response of orange juice consumption with breakfast in individuals with type 2 diabetes: a randomized cross-over trial. Nutr Diabetes. 2025;15(1):31. doi:10.1038/s41387-025-00385-8

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