Summaries of Must-Read Clinical Literature, Guidelines, and FDA Actions
Sustainability of Diabetes Prevention Strategies
JAMA Intern Med; ePub 2017 Nov 6; Haw, et al
Lifestyle modification (LSM) and medications (weight loss and insulin-sensitizing agents) successfully reduce diabetes incidence in adults at risk for diabetes; however, medication effects are short lived while LSM effects are better in the long term but decline with time. This according to a systematic review and meta-analysis that estimated aggregate long-term effects of different diabetes prevention strategies on diabetes incidence in adults aged ≥18 years at risk for diabetes. LSM and medication interventions (>6 months) were evaluated. Researchers found:
- 43 studies were included and pooled in meta-analysis (49,029 participants; mean age 57.3 years); 19 tested medications; 19 evaluated LSM, and 5 tested combined medications and LSM.
- At the end of the active intervention (range, 0.5-6.3 years), LSM was associated with relative risk (RR) reduction of 39% (RR, 0.61) and medications were associated with the RR reduction of 36% (RR, 0.64).
- Effects of medications were not sustained after they were discontinued; effects of LSM, however, were sustained after intervention was stopped, although the effects declined over time. At the end of the washout or follow-up periods, LSM studies (mean follow-up, 7.2 years) achieved an RR reduction of 28% (RR, 0.72;) while medication studies (mean follow-up, 17 weeks) showed no sustained RR reduction (RR, 0.95).
Haw JS, Galaviz KI, Straus AN, et al. Long-term sustainability of diabetes prevention approaches. A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized clinical trials. [Published online ahead of print November 6, 2017. JAMA Intern Med. doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2017.6040.
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Patterns of Diabetes Screening During Office Visits, J Am Board Fam Med; 2019 Mar-Apr; Shealy, et al
The Diabetes Prevention Program Trial showed that lifestyle modification is not only effective in preventing progression from prediabetes to diabetes, but it is about twice as effective as medications in decreasing that progression.1 This meta-analysis adds to the strength of the literature on lifestyle modifications in showing that they have a greater sustained duration of action than medications, with lifestyle modifications continuing to have an effect after the intervention is completed. The lesson for us as clinicians is clear: For patients with prediabetes, the most effective and sustained intervention to help them avoid developing diabetes is lifestyle modification. It is also important for us to educate patients and emphasize this in our offices. —Neil Skolnik, MD