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Remission of pre-diabetes to normal glucose tolerance in obese adults with high protein versus high carbohydrate diet: randomized control trial.

BMJ open diabetes research & care
May 5, 2016
Frankie B Stentz et al. (7 authors)
Journal ArticleHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to compare the effects of a high-protein diet versus a high-carbohydrate diet on remission of pre-diabetes and metabolic parameters in obese, prediabetic subjects.

Results Summary

Only 33.3% of subjects on the high-carbohydrate diet achieved remission of pre-diabetes, compared to 100% on the high-protein diet. The high-carbohydrate diet showed less improvement in insulin sensitivity, cardiovascular risk factors, inflammatory cytokines, oxidative stress, and lean body mass compared to the high-protein diet.

Population

24 prediabetic, obese women and men.

Effective Dosage

55% carbohydrate, 15% protein, 30% fat (daily dietary composition).

Duration

6 months.

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (7)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
high protein (HP) diet
decrease
pre-diabetes to normal glucose tolerance
pre-diabetes women and men
100%
had remission
#1
high carbohydrate (HC) diet
decrease
pre-diabetes to normal glucose tolerance
pre-diabetes women and men
33.3%
had remission
#2
HP diet
increase
insulin sensitivity
pre-diabetes women and men
-
exhibited significant improvement in
#3
HP diet
decrease
cardiovascular risk factors
pre-diabetes women and men
-
exhibited significant improvement in
#4
HP diet
decrease
inflammatory cytokines
pre-diabetes women and men
-
exhibited significant improvement in
#5
HP diet
decrease
oxidative stress
pre-diabetes women and men
-
exhibited significant improvement in
#6
HP diet
increase
percent lean body mass
pre-diabetes women and men
-
increased
#7
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Remission of pre-diabetes to normal is an important health concern which has had little success in the past. This study objective was to determine the effect on remission of pre-diabetes with a high protein (HP) versus high carbohydrate (HC) diet and effects on metabolic parameters, lean and fat body mass in prediabetic, obese subjects after 6 months of dietary intervention. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We recruited and randomized 24 pre-diabetes women and men to either a HP (30% protein, 30% fat, 40% carbohydrate; n=12) or HC (15% protein, 30% fat, 55% carbohydrate; n=12) diet feeding study for 6 months in this randomized controlled trial. All meals were provided to subjects for 6 months with daily food menus for HP or HC compliance with weekly food pick-up and weight measurements. At baseline and after 6 months on the respective diets oral glucose tolerance and meal tolerance tests were performed with glucose and insulin measurements and dual energy X-ray absorptiometry scans. RESULTS: After 6 months on the HP diet, 100% of the subjects had remission of their pre-diabetes to normal glucose tolerance, whereas only 33.3% of subjects on the HC diet had remission of their pre-diabetes. The HP diet group exhibited significant improvement in (1) insulin sensitivity (p=0.001), (2) cardiovascular risk factors (p=0.04), (3) inflammatory cytokines (p=0.001), (4) oxidative stress (p=0.001), (5) increased percent lean body mass (p=0.001) compared with the HC diet at 6 months. CONCLUSIONS: This is the first dietary intervention feeding study, to the best of our knowledge, to report 100% remission of pre-diabetes with a HP diet and significant improvement in metabolic parameters and anti-inflammatory effects compared with a HC diet at 6 months. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT0164284.

Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy33/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations40
Citations/Year4.4
Relative Citation Ratio1.64
NIH Percentile68.2%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score2.03
Normalized Score0.50
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