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Weight Change and Glycemic Control After Diagnosis of Type 2 Diabetes
Authors:Adrianne C. Feldstein  Gregory A. Nichols  David H. Smith  A. Gabriela Rosales  Nancy Perrin
Affiliation:(1) Center for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente Northwest, Portland, OR, USA;(2) Northwest Permanente, Portland, OR, USA;(3) Center for Health Research, Portland, OR, USA
Abstract:BACKGROUND  Limited community-based data describe weight change after diabetes diagnosis. OBJECTIVE  To evaluate weight change patterns and associations in the 1st year after diabetes mellitus type 2 diagnosis. DESIGN  Retrospective cohort study. PARTICIPANTS  Patients aged 21–75 with diabetes mellitus type 2 diagnosed between 1 January 1997 and 31 December 2004, identified from electronic medical records in Kaiser Permanente Northwest, a health maintenance organization. Eligible patients met weight measurement criteria (a baseline and three additional weight measurements) and did not have a condition associated with unintentional weight change (n = 4,135). MEASUREMENTS  We estimated 12-month patient weight trajectories using growth curve analyses, grouped similar trajectories using cluster analysis, and compared characteristics among groups. RESULTS  The four weight trajectory groups were “higher stable weight” (n = 757; 18.3%), “lower stable weight” (n = 2,236; 54.1%), “weight gain” (n = 664; 16.0%), and “weight loss” (n = 478; 11.6%). After adjustments, members of the weight-loss group were more likely than those in the weight-gain group to be older, female, take fewer medications, have had nutritionist visits, and have a lower mean HbA1c. Those in the weight-loss group were less likely to be in a race group at higher risk for obesity, have depression or dyslipidemia, or have taken >30 days of a sulfonylurea alone or with metformin. CONCLUSIONS  A small-but-substantial group of patients had a mean weight trajectory that included a clinically significant weight loss. Weight-loss trajectories were strongly associated with better glycemic control when compared to weight gain. Patients with certain characteristics may need more support for weight loss. This study was supported by grant no. R21 DK073546–02 (Weight in Secondary Prevention) from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases
Keywords:diabetes  mellitus type 2  weight change  weight gain  weight loss  glycemic control
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