Durrer Cody, McKelvey Sean, Singer Joel, Batterham Alan M, Johnson James D, Wortman Jay, Little Jonathan P
School of Health and Exercise Sciences, University of British Columbia, Kelowna, BC, V1V 1V7, Canada.
Institute for Personalized Therapeutic Nutrition, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Trials. 2019 Dec 27;20(1):781. doi: 10.1186/s13063-019-3873-7.
The current treatment paradigm for type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2D) typically involves use of multiple medications to lower glucose levels in hope of reducing long-term complications. However, such treatment does not necessarily address the underlying pathophysiology of the disease and very few patients achieve partial, complete, or prolonged remission of T2D after diagnosis. The therapeutic potential of nutrition has been highlighted recently based on results of clinical trials reporting remission of T2D with targeted dietary approaches. During the initial phase of such interventions that restrict carbohydrates and/or induce rapid weight loss, hypoglycemia presents a notable risk to patients. We therefore hypothesized that delivering very low-carbohydrate, low-calorie therapeutic nutrition through community pharmacies would be an innovative strategy to facilitate lowering of glycated hemoglobin (A1C) while safely reducing the use of glucose-lowering medications in T2D.
A community-based randomized controlled trial that is pragmatic in nature, following a parallel-group design will be conducted (N = 200). Participants will have an equal chance of being randomized to either a pharmacist-led, therapeutic carbohydrate restricted (Pharm-TCR) diet or guideline-based treatment as usual (TAU). Pharm-TCR involves a 12-week very low carbohydrate, calorie-restricted commercial diet plan led by pharmacists and lifestyle coaches with pharmacists responsible for managing medications in collaboration with the participants' family physicians. Main inclusion criteria are diagnosis of T2D, currently treated with glucose-lowering medications, age 30-75 years, and body mass index ≥ 30. The primary outcome is a binary measure of use of glucose-lowering medication. Secondary outcomes include A1C, anthropometrics and clinical blood markers.
There are inherent risks involved if patients with T2D who take glucose-lowering medications follow very low carbohydrate diets. This randomized controlled trial aims to determine whether engaging community pharmacists is a safe and effective way to deliver therapeutic carbohydrate restriction and reduce/eliminate the need for glucose-lowering medications in people with T2D.
ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03181165. Registered on 8 June 2017.
2型糖尿病(T2D)目前的治疗模式通常包括使用多种药物来降低血糖水平,以期减少长期并发症。然而,这种治疗方式不一定能解决该疾病的潜在病理生理学问题,而且很少有患者在确诊后能实现T2D的部分、完全或长期缓解。基于临床试验结果,即通过有针对性的饮食方法可实现T2D缓解,营养的治疗潜力最近得到了凸显。在这类限制碳水化合物和/或导致快速体重减轻的干预措施的初始阶段,低血糖对患者构成了显著风险。因此,我们推测通过社区药房提供极低碳水化合物、低热量的治疗性营养,将是一种创新策略,有助于降低糖化血红蛋白(A1C)水平,同时安全减少T2D患者降糖药物的使用。
将开展一项基于社区的务实随机对照试验,采用平行组设计(N = 200)。参与者将有同等机会被随机分配到由药剂师主导的治疗性碳水化合物限制(Pharm-TCR)饮食组或基于指南的常规治疗(TAU)组。Pharm-TCR包括一个为期12周的极低碳水化合物、热量限制的商业饮食计划,由药剂师和生活方式教练指导,药剂师负责与参与者的家庭医生合作管理药物。主要纳入标准为T2D诊断,目前正在接受降糖药物治疗,年龄30 - 75岁,体重指数≥30。主要结局是降糖药物使用的二元测量。次要结局包括A1C、人体测量指标和临床血液标志物。
服用降糖药物的T2D患者采用极低碳水化合物饮食存在固有风险。这项随机对照试验旨在确定让社区药剂师参与是否是一种安全有效的方式,来实施治疗性碳水化合物限制并减少/消除T2D患者对降糖药物的需求。
ClinicalTrials.gov,NCT03181165。于2017年6月8日注册。