Clinical Review

Prevention of Type 2 Diabetes: Evidence and Strategies


 

References

Surgery

Over the past decade, bariatric surgery has become one of the most effective interventions for inducing and sustaining weight reduction in severely obese patients, leading to a significant benefit in diabetes prevention or remission. The Swedish Obese Subject Study is a large ongoing prospective nonrandomized cohort study that between 1987 and 2001 enrolled 4047 nondiabetic obese participants who underwent gastric surgery or were matched obese control, with diabetes incidence measured at 2, 10 and 15 years [74–76]. At 15 years, analysis of the available cohort of the initial group showed that T2DM developed in 392 of 1658 control participants and in 110 of 1771 bariatric-surgery participants, corresponding to incidence rates of 28.4 and 6.8 cases per 1000 person-years, respectively ( P < 0.001). The treatment effects on the incidence of T2DM were at least as strong after 2 years and 10 years of follow-up as after 15 years. This effect was most prominent among the 591 patients who had IFG at baseline, with a number needed to treat as low as 1.3. The surgery group maintained an average 20-kg weight loss at 15 years.

In another study of the effects of bariatric surgery, 150 of 152 obese participants with IGT who underwent gastric bypass achieved and maintained a normal glycemic profile at 14 years of follow-up [77]. Similarly, in a follow-up of 136 obese participants with IGT, 109 of whom underwent bariatric surgery, 1 participant in the surgical group developed diabetes, as compared with 6 out of 27 in the control group [78]. In a meta-analysis including studies involving 22,094 patients who underwent bariatric surgery, 76.8% had complete resolution of their diabetes [79]. The rapid improvement of glycemic profile after bariatric surgery is thought to be due to oral intake restriction as well as acute hormonal changes related to the exclusion of the upper gastrointestinal tract (eg, incretin and ghrelin levels variations) [80].

Conclusions and Recommendations

The natural history of T2DM allows identification of patients at risk for diabetes and implementation of prevention strategies, which seems to be a public health need given the alarming increase in diabetes incidence. Indeed, the onset of T2DM is typically preceded by many years of beta cell dysfunction translating into carbohydrate metabolism abnormalities such as IFG and IGT, providing an excellent window of opportunity to identify persons at risk and prevent progression to diabetes. Numerous randomized controlled trials established lifestyle modifications, including dietary changes, moderate weight loss, and moderate intensity physical activity, as safe and effective interventions to prevent diabetes. This protective effect has been consistently shown to be sustained for more than 10 years after the initial intervention. Pharmacologic agents such as metformin, thiazolidinediones, alpha-glucosidase inhibitors, xenical, liraglutide, and insulin have also been associated with diabetes prevention in patients at risk. However, except for metformin, safety concerns or lack of durable efficacy or tolerability seem to outweigh their potential diabetes prevention benefit.

Given their favorable glycemic effect, RAS blockade and fibrates should be considered, when indicated, as reasonable treatment options for hypertension and hyperlipidemia in prediabetic patients. Bariatric surgery has been associated with a dramatic reduction in diabetes incidence in obese prediabetic patients and can be considered an alternative prevention measure in patients with severe obesity and prediabetes.

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