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Effects of lifestyle changes on adults with prediabetes: A systematic review and meta-analysis
Authors:Anna Glechner  Lina Keuchel  Lisa Affengruber  Viktoria Titscher  Isolde Sommer  Nina Matyas  Gernot Wagner  Christina Kien  Irma Klerings  Gerald Gartlehner
Affiliation:1. Danube University Krems, Department for Evidence-based Medicine and Clinical Epidemiology, Austria;2. Private Contribution, Munich, Germany;3. Research Triangle Institute (RTI) International, USA
Abstract:

Aims

To assess the efficacy, safety, and cost-effectiveness of lifestyle intervention, compared with treatment as usual in people with prediabetes as defined by the American Diabetes Association. For older studies, we used the 1985 World Health Organization definition.

Methods

We systematically searched multiple electronic databases and referenced lists of pertinent review articles from January 1980 through November 2015. We performed an update search in MEDLINE on April 26, 2017. Based on a priori established eligibility criteria, we dually reviewed the literature, extracted data, and rated the risk of bias of included studies with validated checklists. To assess the efficacy of lifestyle intervention to prevent or delay further progression to type 2 diabetes, we conducted a random-effects meta-analysis. We assessed the certainty of evidence using the GRADE (Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation) approach.

Result

Pooled results of 16 randomized controlled trials showed that people with prediabetes who received lifestyle intervention had a lower rate of progression to type 2 diabetes after one (4% vs. 10%, RR 0.46 [CI 0.32, 0.66]) and three years of follow-up (14% vs. 23%, RR 0.64 [95% CI 0.53, 0.77]). The majority of the studies also showed a greater weight loss in lifestyle intervention participants, with a great variation between studies. Costs per quality-adjusted life-year were lower when the benefits of lifestyle intervention were analyzed over a lifelong time horizon compared to only the period of lifestyle intervention (three years) or to modeling over a ten-year period.

Conclusion

Lifestyle intervention is an efficacious, safe, and cost-effective measure to reduce the risk of progression to type 2 diabetes in people diagnosed with prediabetes. More research is necessary to compare the efficacy of various modes, frequencies, and intensities of lifestyle intervention across studies.
Keywords:ADA  American Diabetes Association  CI  Confidence interval  Finnish DPS  Finnish Diabetes Prevention Study  HR  Hazard ratio  IDPP-1  Indian Diabetes Prevention Programme  IFG  Impaired fasting glucose  IGT  Impaired glucose tolerance  QALY  Quality-adjusted life-year  RCT  Randomized controlled trial  RR  Relative risk  U.S. DPP  United States Diabetes Prevention Program  vs.  versus  WHO  World Health Organization  Cost-effectiveness  Diabetes prevention  Prediabetes  Lifestyle intervention  Systematic review  Meta-analysis
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