Background: post-prandial hyperglycemia is increasingly observed in obese children with insulin resistance (IR). A theoretical debate has emerged on whether glucose spilling into urine—once plasma glucose exceeds the renal threshold—may represent a transient adaptive mechanism that off-loads calories and slows further weight gain. Evidence from familial renal glucosuria (FRG) and pharmacologic SGLT2 inhibition demonstrates that urinary glucose excretion can induce measurable caloric loss. However, contrasting data from pediatric and adult cohorts show that IR and hyperglycemia are biologically injurious, driving early vascular, renal, hepatic, and β-cell damage. This review synthesizes and compares evidence supporting and opposing the adaptive hypothesis.Objectives: (1) To summarize the physiological rationale for glycosuria as an adaptive calorie-losing mechanism in obese, insulin-resistant youth; (2) to evaluate clinical and mechanistic data demonstrating harmful consequences of IR and hyperglycemia; and (3) to provide a balanced interpretation of whether any adaptive benefit outweighs established metabolic risks.Methods: A narrative synthesis was conducted using findings from pediatric urine-glucose screening programs, OGTT-based dysglycemia studies, FRG genetic cohorts, SGLT2 inhibitor trials, and mechanistic literature on endothelial dysfunction, oxidative stress, β-cell glucotoxicity, NAFLD/MASLD progression, and early microvascular complications in youth-onset type 2 diabetes. Comparative analysis evaluated whether calorie loss via glycosuria provides meaningful metabolic protection relative to the known harms of chronic hyperglycemia.Results: Evidence supporting the adaptive hypothesis includes: (a) FRG cohorts, where lifelong low renal glucose thresholds cause persistent glycosuria and are associated with lower BMI and benign metabolic profiles; (b) adult SGLT2 inhibitor studies showing ~70–90 g/day urinary glucose loss (~250–300 kcal/day) with modest fat reduction; and (c) pediatric urine-glucose screening programs where obese youth commonly exceed renal thresholds, theoretically losing calories. However, substantial evidence counters this hypothesis. IR and hyperglycemia in children produce early and measurable injury, including endothelial dysfunction, increased carotid intima-media thickness, hypertension, microalbuminuria, NAFLD progression, rapid onset of retinopathy and neuropathy in youth-onset type 2 diabetes, and β-cell decompensation driven by glucotoxicity. Neurocognitive studies show associations between chronic hyperglycemia and altered brain development. Importantly, compensatory hyperphagia and adaptive metabolic responses significantly reduce the sustained weight-loss impact of glycosuria. No pediatric data supports intentional tolerance of hyperglycemia as a metabolic strategy.Conclusions: Although glycosuria can theoretically reduce energy balance, the magnitude of calorie loss is modest and easily offset by compensatory mechanisms. In contrast, the harms of IR and hyperglycemia in obese children are substantial, early, and multi-systemic. The cumulative evidence strongly indicates that hyperglycemia is not adaptive in this context and should not be viewed as metabolically protective.
Soliman et al. (Wed,) studied this question.