The role of diet in the prevention of type 2 diabetes.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to review the role of dietary components, including dairy, in influencing diabetes risk and cardiovascular biomarkers.
Results Summary
The study suggests that a prudent diet, which includes low-fat dairy, may help reduce diabetes risk, particularly when combined with weight management and other healthy dietary patterns like the Mediterranean diet. High-fat dairy was associated with higher diabetes risk.
Population
Subjects with prediabetes and general populations at risk for diabetes.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
weight loss | decrease | diabetes risk | - | - | is the main driving force to reduce | #1 |
diet and exercise leading to weight loss | decrease | the incidence of diabetes | subjects with prediabetes | - | consistently reduce | #2 |
most dietary components influencing diabetes risk | neutral | biomarkers of cardiovascular risk and inflammation | - | - | have similar effects on | #3 |
the so-called prudent diet | decrease | diabetes risk | - | - | appears as the best strategy to decrease | #4 |
a Mediterranean dietary pattern | decrease | diabetes risk | - | - | appears as the best strategy to decrease | #5 |
Type 2 diabetes mellitus is an important preventable disease and a growing public health problem. Epidemiologic and interventional studies suggest that weight loss is the main driving force to reduce diabetes risk. Landmark clinical trials of lifestyle changes in subjects with prediabetes have shown that diet and exercise leading to weight loss consistently reduce the incidence of diabetes. However, from these studies it cannot be established whether dietary changes alone play a significant role in preventing diabetes. Here we review epidemiologic and clinical trial evidence relating nutrients, foods and dietary patterns to diabetes risk and the possible mechanisms involved. The differential effects of carbohydrate and fat quantity and quality, and those of specific foods and whole diets are discussed. Importantly, most dietary components influencing diabetes risk have similar effects on biomarkers of cardiovascular risk and inflammation. The conclusion is that there is no universal dietary strategy to prevent diabetes or delay its onset. Together with the maintenance of ideal body weight, the promotion of the so-called prudent diet (characterized by a higher intake of food groups that are generally recommended for health promotion, particularly plant-based foods, and a lower intake of red meat, meat products, sweets, high-fat dairy and refined grains) or a Mediterranean dietary pattern rich in olive oil, fruits and vegetables, including whole grains, pulses and nuts, low-fat dairy, and moderate alcohol consumption (mainly red wine) appears as the best strategy to decrease diabetes risk, especially if dietary recommendations take into account individual preferences, thus enabling long-time adherence.