Diets for weight management in adults with type 2 diabetes: an umbrella review of published meta-analyses and systematic review of trials of diets for diabetes remission
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Authors
Churuangsuk, Chaitong
Hall, Julien
Reynolds, Andrew
Combet, Emilie
Lean, Michael EJ
Publication Date
2022-01Journal Title
Diabetologia
ISSN
0012-186X
Publisher
Springer
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Churuangsuk, C., Hall, J., Reynolds, A., Griffin, S., Combet, E., & Lean, M. E. (2022). Diets for weight management in adults with type 2 diabetes: an umbrella review of published meta-analyses and systematic review of trials of diets for diabetes remission. Diabetologia https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-021-05577-2
Abstract
Aims/hypothesis Weight reduction is fundamental for type 2 diabetes management and remission, but uncertainty exists over
which diet type is best to achieve and maintain weight loss. We evaluated dietary approaches for weight loss, and remission, in
people with type 2 diabetes to inform practice and clinical guidelines.
Methods First, we conducted a systematic review of published meta-analyses of RCTs of weight-loss diets. We searched
MEDLINE (Ovid), PubMed, Web of Science and Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, up to 7 May 2021. We synthesised
weight loss findings stratified by diet types and assessed meta-analyses quality with A Measurement Tool to Assess Systematic
Reviews (AMSTAR) 2. We assessed certainty of pooled results of each meta-analysis using Grading of Recommendations,
Assessment, Development and Evaluations (GRADE) (PROSPERO CRD42020169258). Second, we conducted a systematic
review of any intervention studies reporting type 2 diabetes remission with weight-loss diets, in MEDLINE (via PubMed),
Embase and Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, up to 10 May 2021. Findings were synthesised by diet type and
study quality (Cochrane Risk of Bias tool 2.0 and Risk Of Bias In Non-randomised Studies – of Interventions [ROBINS-I]), with
GRADE applied (PROSPERO CRD42020208878).
Results We identified 19 meta-analyses of weight-loss diets, involving 2–23 primary trials (n = 100–1587), published 2013–
2021. Twelve were ‘critically low’ or ‘low’ AMSTAR 2 quality, with seven ‘high’ quality. Greatest weight loss was reported
with very low energy diets, 1.7–2.1 MJ/day (400–500 kcal) for 8–12 weeks (high-quality meta-analysis, GRADE low), achieving
6.6 kg (95% CI −9.5, −3.7) greater weight loss than low-energy diets (4.2–6.3 MJ/day [1000–1500 kcal]). Formula meal
replacements (high quality, GRADE moderate) achieved 2.4 kg (95% CI −3.3, −1.4) greater weight loss over 12–52 weeks.
Low-carbohydrate diets were no better for weight loss than higher-carbohydrate/low-fat diets (high quality, GRADE high). Highprotein, Mediterranean, high-monounsaturated-fatty-acid, vegetarian and low-glycaemic-index diets all achieved minimal (0.3–
2 kg) or no difference from control diets (low to critically low quality, GRADE very low/moderate). For type 2 diabetes
remission, of 373 records, 16 met inclusion criteria. Remissions at 1 year were reported for a median 54% of participants in
RCTs including initial low-energy total diet replacement (low-risk-of-bias study, GRADE high), and 11% and 15% for meal
replacements and Mediterranean diets, respectively (some concerns for risk of bias in studies, GRADE moderate/low). For
ketogenic/very low-carbohydrate and very low-energy food-based diets, the evidence for remission (20% and 22%, respectively)
has serious and critical risk of bias, and GRADE certainty is very low.
Conclusions/interpretation Published meta-analyses of hypocaloric diets for weight management in people with type 2 diabetes
do not support any particular macronutrient profile or style over others. Very low energy diets and formula meal replacement
appear the most effective approaches, generally providing less energy than self-administered food-based diets. Programmes
including a hypocaloric formula ‘total diet replacement’ induction phase were most effective for type 2 diabetes remission. Most
of the evidence is restricted to 1 year or less. Well-conducted research is needed to assess longer-term impacts on weight,
glycaemic control, clinical outcomes and diabetes complications.
Sponsorship
MRC (MC_UU_00006/6)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-021-05577-2
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/330958
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