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Prevention of type 2 diabetes; a systematic review and meta-analysis of different intervention strategies.

Diabetes, obesity & metabolism
August 1, 2014
C Merlotti et al. (3 authors)
Comparative StudyJournal ArticleMeta-AnalysisSystematic ReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the effectiveness of bariatric surgery in preventing type 2 diabetes compared to other intervention strategies.

Results Summary

Bariatric surgery was the most effective strategy in preventing type 2 diabetes, particularly in morbidly obese subjects, with an odds ratio of 0.16 (CI 0.11-0.24). The study found that non-surgical strategies also prevented diabetes but with varying effectiveness.

Population

Morbidly obese subjects

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (18)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
diet plus physical activity
decrease
type 2 diabetes
-
-
were able to prevent
#1
physical activity
decrease
type 2 diabetes
-
-
were able to prevent
#2
glitazones
decrease
type 2 diabetes
-
-
were able to prevent
#3
metformin
decrease
type 2 diabetes
-
-
were able to prevent
#4
alfa-glucosidase inhibitors
decrease
type 2 diabetes
-
-
were able to prevent
#5
ACE inhibitors
decrease
type 2 diabetes
-
-
were able to prevent
#6
ARB
decrease
type 2 diabetes
-
-
were able to prevent
#7
calcium antagonists
decrease
type 2 diabetes
-
-
were able to prevent
#8
diets
decrease
type 2 diabetes
-
-
were able to prevent
#9
lipid-affecting drugs (orlistat, bezafibrate)
decrease
type 2 diabetes
-
-
were able to prevent
#10
alcohol
decrease
type 2 diabetes
-
-
were able to prevent
#11
coffee
decrease
type 2 diabetes
-
-
were able to prevent
#12
bariatric surgery
decrease
type 2 diabetes
-
-
were able to prevent
#13
beta-cell stimulating drugs (sulphanylureas, glinides)
no change
type 2 diabetes
-
-
were not able to prevent
#14
estrogens
no change
type 2 diabetes
-
-
were not able to prevent
#15
vitamins
no change
type 2 diabetes
-
-
were not able to prevent
#16
bariatric surgery
decrease
type 2 diabetes
morbidly obese subjects
0.16 (C.I. 0.11,0.24)
was the most effective strategy
#17
non-surgical strategies
decrease
type 2 diabetes
-
from 0.37 (C.I. 0.26-0.52) to 0.85 (C.I. 0.77-0.93)
were able to prevent
#18
Abstract

AIM: Different intervention strategies can prevent type 2 diabetes (T2DM). Aim of the present systematic review and meta-analysis was to evaluate the effectiveness of different strategies. METHODS: Studies were grouped into 15 different strategies: 1: diet plus physical activity; 2: physical activity; 3-6: anti-diabetic drugs [glitazones, metformin, beta-cell stimulating drugs (sulphanylureas, glinides), alfa-glucosidase inhibitors]; 7-8: cardiovascular drugs (ACE inhibitors, ARB, calcium antagonists); 9-14 [diets, lipid-affecting drugs (orlistat, bezafibrate), vitamins, micronutrients, estrogens, alcohol, coffee]; 15: bariatric surgery. Only controlled studies were included in the analysis, whether randomized, non-randomized, observational studies, whether primarily designed to assess incident cases of diabetes, or performed with other purposes, such as control of hypertension, of ischemic heart disease or prevention of cardiovascular events. Appropriate methodology [preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses (PRISMA) statement] was used. Seventy-one studies (490 813 subjects), published as full papers, were analysed to identify predictors of new cases of T2DM, and were included in a meta-analysis (random-effects model) to study the effect of different strategies. Intervention effect (new cases of diabetes) was expressed as odds ratio (OR), with 95% confidence intervals (C.I.s). Publication bias was formally assessed. RESULTS: Body mass index was in the overweight range for 13 groups, obese or morbidly obese in lipid-affecting drugs and in bariatric surgery. Non-surgical strategies, except for beta-cell stimulating drugs, estrogens and vitamins, were able to prevent T2DM, with different effectiveness, from 0.37 (C.I. 0.26-0.52) to 0.85 (C.I. 0.77-0.93); the most effective strategy was bariatric surgery in morbidly obese subjects [0.16 (C.I. 0.11,0.24)]. At meta-regression analysis, age of subjects and amount of weight lost were associated with effectiveness of intervention. CONCLUSIONS: These data indicate that several strategies prevent T2DM, making it possible to make a choice for the individual subject.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
Anti-Obesity AgentsBariatric SurgeryCardiovascular AgentsCombined Modality TherapyControlled Clinical Trials as TopicDiabetes Mellitus, Type 2Diet, ReducingEvidence-Based MedicineHumansHypoglycemic AgentsLife StyleMotor ActivityObesityObesity, MorbidOverweightWeight Loss
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy95/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations101
Citations/Year9.2
Relative Citation Ratio3.64
NIH Percentile88.6%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score1.90
Normalized Score0.75
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