Magnitude of A1C improvement in relation to baseline A1C and amount of weight loss in response to intensive lifestyle intervention in real-world diabetes practice: 13 years of observation
真实世界糖尿病实践中强化生活方式干预对与基线HbA1C相关的HbA1C改善幅度以及体重减轻的影响:13年观察
Ahmed H. Eldib, Shilton Dhaver, Marwa Al-Badri, Tareq Salah, Karim Kibaa, Omnia Elenani, Shaheen Tomah, Hannah Gardner, Osama Hamdy
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引用次数: 1
Abstract
Background
Effect of intensive lifestyle intervention (ILI) on A1C in participants with diabetes is underestimated. A1C improvement is presumed to be dependent on the amount of weight loss. Here, we evaluate the magnitude of A1C change in relation to baseline A1C and the amount of weight loss in participants with diabetes who underwent ILI over 13 years in real-world clinical practice.
Methods
A total of 590 participants with diabetes were enrolled in the Weight Achievement and Intensive Treatment (Why WAIT) program, a 12-week multidisciplinary ILI program designed for real-world clinical practice between September 2005 and May 2018. We stratified participants based on baseline A1C into three groups: group A: A1C ≥ 9%, group B: A1C 8 to <9%, and group C: A1C ≥6.5% to <8%.
Results
After 12-weeks of intervention, body weight decreased in all groups, and pairwise comparisons of A1C changes showed that: group A had 1.3% greater A1C reduction than group B (p = 0.0001) and 2% greater than group C (p = 0.0001), while group B had 0.7% greater A1C reduction than group C (p = 0.0001).
Conclusion
We conclude that ILI may decrease A1C by up to 2.5% in participants with diabetes. At similar magnitude of weight loss, A1C reduction was more prominent in participants with higher baseline A1C. This may be valuable for clinicians to set a realistic expectation of A1C change in response to ILI.
Magnitude of A1C improvement in relation to baseline A1C and amount of weight loss in response to intensive lifestyle intervention in real-world diabetes practice: 13 years of observation 真实世界糖尿病实践中强化生活方式干预对与基线HbA1C相关的HbA1C改善幅度以及体重减轻的影响:13年观察
期刊介绍:
Journal of Diabetes (JDB) devotes itself to diabetes research, therapeutics, and education. It aims to involve researchers and practitioners in a dialogue between East and West via all aspects of epidemiology, etiology, pathogenesis, management, complications and prevention of diabetes, including the molecular, biochemical, and physiological aspects of diabetes. The Editorial team is international with a unique mix of Asian and Western participation.
The Editors welcome submissions in form of original research articles, images, novel case reports and correspondence, and will solicit reviews, point-counterpoint, commentaries, editorials, news highlights, and educational content.