Body Size and Shape Changes and the Risk of Diabetes in the Diabetes Prevention Program
Open Access
- 1 June 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Diabetes Association in Diabetes
- Vol. 56 (6) , 1680-1685
- https://doi.org/10.2337/db07-0009
Abstract
The researchers conducted this study to test the hypothesis that risk of type 2 diabetes is less following reductions in body size and central adiposity. The Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) recruited and randomized individuals with impaired glucose tolerance to treatment with placebo, metformin, or lifestyle modification. Height, weight, waist circumference, and subcutaneous and visceral fat at L2-L3 and L4-L5 by computed tomography were measured at baseline and at 1 year. Cox proportional hazards models assessed by sex the effect of change in these variables over the 1st year of intervention upon development of diabetes over subsequent follow-up in a subset of 758 participants. Lifestyle reduced visceral fat at L2-L3 (men −24.3%, women −18.2%) and at L4-L5 (men −22.4%, women −17.8%), subcutaneous fat at L2-L3 (men −15.7%, women −11.4%) and at L4-L5 (men −16.7%, women −11.9%), weight (men −8.2%, women −7.8%), BMI (men −8.2%, women −7.8%), and waist circumference (men −7.5%, women −6.1%). Metformin reduced weight (−2.9%) and BMI (−2.9%) in men and subcutaneous fat (−3.6% at L2-L3 and −4.7% at L4-L5), weight (−3.3%), BMI (−3.3%), and waist circumference (−2.8%) in women. Decreased diabetes risk by lifestyle intervention was associated with reductions of body weight, BMI, and central body fat distribution after adjustment for age and self-reported ethnicity. Reduced diabetes risk with lifestyle intervention may have been through effects upon both overall body fat and central body fat but with metformin appeared to be independent of body fat.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Relationship of Body Size and Shape to the Development of Diabetes in the Diabetes Prevention ProgramObesity, 2006
- What aspects of body fat are particularly hazardous and how do we measure them?International Journal of Epidemiology, 2005
- Comparison of Visceral Adipose Tissue Mass in Adult African Americans and Whites**Obesity Research, 2005
- Achieving Weight and Activity Goals Among Diabetes Prevention Program Lifestyle ParticipantsObesity Research, 2004
- Reduction in the Incidence of Type 2 Diabetes with Lifestyle Intervention or MetforminNew England Journal of Medicine, 2002
- Mobilization of Visceral Adipose Tissue Related to the Improvement in Insulin Sensitivity in Response to Physical Training in NIDDM: Effects of branched-chain amino acid supplementsDiabetes Care, 1997
- Weight loss reduces abdominal fat and improves insulin action in middle-aged and older men with impaired glucose toleranceMetabolism, 1995
- Relationships of generalized and regional adiposity to insulin sensitivity in men.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1995
- Contribution of intra-abdominal fat accumulation to the impairment of glucose and lipid metabolism in human obesityMetabolism, 1987
- The influence of body fat distribution on the incidence of diabetes mellitus. 13.5 years of follow-up of the participants in the study of men born in 1913Diabetes, 1985