Research Dietitians, Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK
The Prevent Breast Cancer Research Unit Research Dietitians, Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust, Manchester, UK.
BMJ Open. 2023 Jul 20;13(7):e071395. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-071395.
Rising levels of overweight and obesity among people with type 1 diabetes (T1D) contribute to insulin resistance, dyslipidaemia, retinopathy, cardiometabolic complications and psychological morbidity. Continuous low-energy diets (CLED) providing approximately 800 kcal (3347 kJ)/day can produce significant weight loss in type 2 diabetes, and intermittent low-energy diets (ILED) may be an alternative. The Manchester Intermittent and Daily diet Type 1 Diabetes App Study (MIDDAS-Type 1) aims to assess the safety, acceptability and feasibility of remotely delivered ILED and CLED programmes for people with T1D and overweight and obesity.
Twelve participants with T1D and body mass index ≥27.5 kg/m (≥25 kg/m in high-risk ethnic minorities) recruited from an National Health Service (NHS) trust and research register in England will be randomised to a remotely delivered CLED (n=6) or ILED (n=6) for 12 weeks. The CLED includes a daily Optifast 850 kcal (3556 kJ) 75 g carbohydrate formula diet. The ILED includes 2 days/week of Optifast and 5 days of a portion-controlled Mediterranean diet (170-250 g carbohydrate/day). Both groups will receive matched high-frequency remote support from a dietitian, nurse and psychologist via telephone and/or the Oviva app. The primary outcome will assess safety (occurrence of severe hypoglycaemia, ketonaemia, ketoacidosis and time above and below target blood glucose). Secondary outcomes include study uptake, retention, dietary adherence, acceptability, intervention delivery fidelity and potential efficacy in relation to change in weight, insulin requirements, glycated haemoglobin, lipids, insulin resistance (estimated glucose disposal rate) and quality of life. Participants will be invited for optional repeat measurements at 52 weeks.
The trial protocol (V4.0/08.06.2022) was granted ethical approval by Cambridge East Research Ethics Committee (Ref: 21/EE/0014). The study will inform progression to a full-scale randomised controlled trial to test the efficacy of these programmes for patients with T1D and overweight and obesity.
NCT04674384; Pre-results.
1 型糖尿病(T1D)患者超重和肥胖水平的上升导致胰岛素抵抗、血脂异常、视网膜病变、心脏代谢并发症和心理发病率上升。提供约 800 卡路里(3347kJ)/天的持续低能量饮食(CLED)可使 2 型糖尿病患者显著减重,而间歇性低能量饮食(ILED)可能是一种替代方法。曼彻斯特间歇性和日常饮食 1 型糖尿病应用研究(MIDDAS-Type 1)旨在评估远程提供的 ILED 和 CLED 方案对超重和肥胖的 T1D 患者的安全性、可接受性和可行性。
从英格兰的一家国民保健服务(NHS)信托和研究登记处招募 12 名 T1D 患者,其身体质量指数(BMI)≥27.5kg/m(高风险少数族裔中≥25kg/m),并将其随机分配至远程提供的 CLED(n=6)或 ILED(n=6)组,疗程为 12 周。CLED 包括每日 Optifast 850 卡路里(3556kJ)75g 碳水化合物配方饮食。ILED 包括每周 2 天的 Optifast 和 5 天的控制份量的地中海饮食(每天 170-250g 碳水化合物)。两组均将通过电话和/或 Oviva 应用程序接受营养师、护士和心理学家的高频远程支持。主要结局评估安全性(严重低血糖、酮血症、酮症酸中毒以及血糖目标以上和以下的时间)。次要结局包括研究参与度、保留率、饮食依从性、可接受性、干预提供的保真度以及与体重、胰岛素需求、糖化血红蛋白、脂质、胰岛素抵抗(估计葡萄糖处置率)和生活质量变化相关的潜在疗效。将邀请参与者在 52 周时进行可选的重复测量。
试验方案(V4.0/08.06.2022)获得了剑桥东部研究伦理委员会的伦理批准(Ref:21/EE/0014)。该研究将为进一步进行全规模随机对照试验提供信息,以测试这些方案对超重和肥胖的 T1D 患者的疗效。
NCT04674384;预结果。