The Stepwise Approach to Diabetes Prevention:... : Diabetes Care (original) (raw)
Epidemiology/Health Services Research
The Stepwise Approach to Diabetes Prevention: Results From the D-CLIP Randomized Controlled Trial
- Mary Beth Weber
- Harish Ranjani
- Lisa R. Staimez
- Ranjit M. Anjana
- Mohammed K. Ali
- Venkat K.M. Narayan
- Viswanathan Mohan
Diabetes Care
39
(
10
)
:p
1760
-
1767
,
October 2016
.
| DOI: 10.2337/dc16-1241
OBJECTIVE
This study tests the effectiveness of expert guidelines for diabetes prevention: lifestyle intervention with addition of metformin, when required, among people with prediabetes.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS
The Diabetes Community Lifestyle Improvement Program (D-CLIP) is a randomized, controlled, translation trial of 578 overweight/obese Asian Indian adults with isolated impaired glucose tolerance (iIGT), isolated impaired fasting glucose (iIFG), or IFG+IGT in Chennai, India. Eligible individuals were identified through community-based recruitment and randomized to standard lifestyle advice (control) or a 6-month, culturally tailored, U.S. Diabetes Prevention Program-based lifestyle curriculum plus stepwise addition of metformin (500 mg, twice daily) for participants at highest risk of conversion to diabetes at ≥4 months of follow-up. The primary outcome, diabetes incidence, was assessed biannually and compared across study arms using an intention-to-treat analysis.
RESULTS
During 3 years of follow-up, 34.9% of control and 25.7% of intervention participants developed diabetes (P = 0.014); the relative risk reduction (RRR) was 32% (95% CI 7-50), and the number needed to treat to prevent one case of diabetes was 9.8. The RRR varied by prediabetes type (IFG+IGT, 36%; iIGT, 31%; iIFG, 12%; P = 0.77) and was stronger in participants 50 years or older, male, or obese. Most participants (72.0%) required metformin in addition to lifestyle, although there was variability by prediabetes type (iIFG, 76.5%; IFG+IGT, 83.0%; iIGT, 51.3%).
CONCLUSIONS
Stepwise diabetes prevention in people with prediabetes can effectively reduce diabetes incidence by a third in community settings; however, people with iIFG may require different interventions.
Copyright © 2016 by the American Diabetes Association, Inc.