Department of Nutrition, Gillings School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC.
Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, School of Medicine, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC.
Diabetes Care. 2024 Sep 1;47(9):1468-1488. doi: 10.2337/dci23-0099.
There is an emerging population of older adults (≥65 years) living with type 1 diabetes. Optimizing health through nutrition during this life stage is challenged by multiple and ongoing changes in diabetes management, comorbidities, and lifestyle factors. There is a need to understand nutritional status, dietary intake, and nutrition-related interventions that may maximize well-being throughout the life span in type 1 diabetes, in addition to nutrition recommendations from clinical guidelines and consensus reports. Three reviewers used Cochrane guidelines to screen original research (January 1993-2023) and guidelines (2012-2023) in two databases (MEDLINE and CENTRAL) to characterize nutrition evidence in this population. We found limited original research explicitly focused on nutrition and diet in adults ≥65 years of age with type 1 diabetes (six experimental studies, five observational studies) and meta-analyses/reviews (one scoping review), since in the majority of analyses individuals ≥65 years of age were combined with those age ≥18 years, with diverse diabetes durations, and also individuals with type 1 and type 2 diabetes were combined. Further, existing clinical guidelines (n = 10) lacked specificity and evidence to guide clinical practice and self-management behaviors in this population. From a scientific perspective, little is known about nutrition and diet among older adults with type 1 diabetes, including baseline nutrition status, dietary intake and eating behaviors, and the impact of nutrition interventions on key clinical and patient-oriented outcomes. This likely reflects the population's recent emergence and unique considerations. Addressing these gaps is foundational to developing evidence-based nutrition practices and guidelines for older adults living with type 1 diabetes.
有一个不断增长的老年人群体(≥65 岁)患有 1 型糖尿病。在这个生命阶段,通过营养来优化健康状况,面临着糖尿病管理、合并症和生活方式因素的多重和持续变化的挑战。除了临床指南和共识报告中的营养建议外,还需要了解营养状况、饮食摄入和与营养相关的干预措施,以最大限度地提高 1 型糖尿病患者的整体生活质量。三位审稿人使用 Cochrane 指南筛选了两个数据库(MEDLINE 和 CENTRAL)中的原始研究(1993 年 1 月至 2023 年)和指南(2012 年至 2023 年),以描述该人群中的营养证据。我们发现,专门针对≥65 岁 1 型糖尿病成年人的营养和饮食的原始研究非常有限(六项实验研究,五项观察性研究),以及荟萃分析/综述(一项范围综述),因为在大多数分析中,≥65 岁的个体与≥18 岁的个体、不同糖尿病病程的个体以及 1 型和 2 型糖尿病患者的个体混合在一起。此外,现有的临床指南(n=10)缺乏特异性和证据来指导该人群的临床实践和自我管理行为。从科学角度来看,我们对 1 型糖尿病老年患者的营养和饮食知之甚少,包括基线营养状况、饮食摄入和饮食习惯,以及营养干预对关键临床和以患者为中心的结局的影响。这可能反映了该人群的近期出现和独特的考虑因素。解决这些差距是为 1 型糖尿病老年患者制定循证营养实践和指南的基础。