Moderate weight reduction by a moderately hypocaloric very-low-fat diet resulted in normalization of fasting hyperglycemia and reversal of hepatic insulin resistance in patients with poorly controlled type 2 diabetes. The Diabetes Remission Clinical Trial (DiRECT) revealed that utilizing a total diet replacement by a low-energy formula diet for 3 months led to a 15 kg or more weight loss in 24% participants and diabetes remission 46% of the participants. To date it remains unknown whether similar results can be achieved with a natural, non-formula based diet in connection with an educative smartphone application and telephone coaching
24 patients with type 2 diabetes from the German Diabetes Study (GDS) with less than 4 years disease duration and not receiving insulin were included in this study. Before the start of the intervention, participants documented their dietary intake by recording a food diary. During the 12-week intervention participants were asked to adhere to a real food-based low-calorie diet supported by an app-guided digital education program as well as a low-calorie recipe book and received weekly coaching calls by nutritionists. Patients were instructed to adhere to a balanced low calorie diet during the intervention. Nutritionists provided structured behavior change focusing on dietary advice, adherence to logging dietary intake and tracking weight. At first visit, patients installed the Changing Health App (Changing Health, Newcastle, UK) and completed an app-based digital education program. This program focused on type 2 diabetes education and behavioral change in combination with weight tracking and dietary monitoring. Patients used the app throughout the study and adherence was monitored via logins. Comprehensive testing before and after the intervention comprised a mixed-meal tolerance test and liver fat.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NA
Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
24
During the 12-week intervention participants were asked to adhere to a real food-based low-calorie diet supported by an app-guided digital education program as well as a low-calorie recipe book and received weekly coaching calls by nutritionists
DDZ (Deutsches Diabetes Zentrum)
Düsseldorf, North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany
Change in insulin sensitivity
Change in insulin sensitivity can be estimated via a mixed-meal tolerance test, a standardized liquid meal consumed by the participants
Time frame: Change in insulin sensitivity after 12 weeks of intervention
Change in öiver fat
Change in liver fat content was estimated from 1-Proton-Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy in a human scanner
Time frame: Change in liver fat after 12 weeks of intervention
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