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Effects of Intensive Lifestyle Intervention on All-Cause Mortality in Older Adults With Type 2 Diabetes and Overweight/Obesity: Results From the Look AHEAD Study

Authors :
Rena R, Wing
George A, Bray
Maria, Cassidy-Begay
Jeanne M, Clark
Mace, Coday
Caitlin, Egan
Mary, Evans
John P, Foreyt
Stephen, Glasser
Edward W, Gregg
Helen P, Hazuda
James O, Hill
Edward S, Horton
Juan Carlos, Isaac
John M, Jakicic
Robert W, Jeffery
Karen C, Johnson
Steven E, Kahn
Stephen, Kritchevsky
E, Lewis
Nisa M, Maruthur
Barbara J, Maschak-Carey
David M, Nathan
Jennifer, Patricio
Anne, Peters
Xavier, Pi-Sunyer
David, Reboussin
Donna H, Ryan
Valerie, Ruelas
Helmut, Steinburg
Katie, Toledo
Thomas A, Wadden
Lynne E, Wagenknecht
Jacqueline, Wesche-Thobaben
Holly, Wyatt
Susan Z, Yanovski
Ping, Zhang
Source :
Diabetes Care
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Look AHEAD, a randomized trial comparing intensive lifestyle intervention (ILI) and diabetes support and education (DSE) (control) in 5,145 individuals with overweight/obesity and type 2 diabetes, found no significant differences in all-cause or cardiovascular mortality or morbidity during 9.6 (median) years of intervention. Participants in ILI who lost ≥10% at 1 year had lower risk of composite cardiovascular outcomes relative to DSE. Since effects of ILI may take many years to emerge, we conducted intent-to-treat analyses comparing mortality in ILI over 16.7 years (9.6 years of intervention and then observation) to DSE. In a secondary exploratory analysis, we compared mortality by magnitude of weight loss in ILI relative to DSE. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Primary outcome was all-cause mortality from randomization to 16.7 years. Other outcomes included cause-specific mortality, interactions by subgroups (age, sex, race/ethnicity, and cardiovascular disease history), and an exploratory analysis by magnitude of weight loss in ILI versus DSE as reference. Analyses used proportional hazards regression and likelihood ratio. RESULTS: The incidence of all-cause mortality did not differ significantly in ILI and DSE (549 and 589 participants, respectively) (hazard ratio [HR] 0.91 [95% CI 0.81, 1.02]; P = 0.11). There were no significant differences between treatments in cause-specific mortality or within prespecified subgroups. ILI participants who lost ≥10% at 1 year had a 21% reduced risk of mortality (HR 0.79 [95% CI 0.67, 0.94]; P = 0.007) relative to DSE. CONCLUSIONS: ILI focused on weight loss did not significantly affect mortality risk. However, ILI participants who lost ≥10% had reduced mortality relative to DSE.

Subjects

Subjects :
Cardiovascular and Metabolic Risk

Details

ISSN :
19355548
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Diabetes care
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........4e42dc0e0e2963a3cd172adc35ce3312