Intensive lifestyle modification improved autonomic function, and higher baseline heart rate was associated with incident diabetes in the lifestyle (HR 1.19) and metformin (HR 1.17) arms (P<0.05).
RCT (n=2,980)
Does intensive lifestyle modification improve autonomic nervous system function and reduce incident diabetes compared to metformin or placebo in participants of the Diabetes Prevention Program?
Intensive lifestyle modification improves autonomic nervous system function, and these improvements are inversely associated with the development of diabetes independent of weight change.
Hazard Ratio: 1.19
p-value: p=<0.05
OBJECTIVE: Autonomic nervous system dysfunction, a correlate of obesity and poor cardiorespiratory fitness, is associated with the development of diabetes. We tested whether estimates of autonomic nervous system function improved in the intensive lifestyle versus metformin or placebo arms of the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) and whether baseline or a change in autonomic nervous system function was associated with the development of diabetes over 3.2 years. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: In 2,980 DPP participants, 12-lead electrocardiograms were measured at baseline and annually. Heart rate, heart rate variability (HRV), and QT duration were used to estimate fitness and autonomic nervous system function. RESULTS: In the lifestyle arm, heart rate and QT indexes decreased, and HRV increased over time. The magnitude of decline in heart rate and QT duration was substantially smaller in the other arms, whereas HRV did not increase. Baseline heart rate was the only index significantly (P < 0.05) associated with incident diabetes after adjustment for demographics and weight change (hazard ratio for lifestyle and metformin arms = 1.19 and 1.17 per 10.6 beats/min, respectively). Decreases in heart rate and QT indexes and increases in HRV over time were associated with a lower risk of developing diabetes. The protective association between decreased heart rate and incident diabetes in the lifestyle arm remained significant after accounting for change in weight and physical activity. CONCLUSIONS: Indexes that reflect autonomic function and fitness improved (i.e., heart rate decreased and HRV increased) in the lifestyle modification arm of the DPP. Improvements in these indexes are inversely associated with the development of diabetes independent of weight change.
Carnethon et al. (Sat,) conducted a rct in Incident diabetes (n=2,980). Intensive lifestyle modification vs. Metformin or placebo was evaluated on Incident diabetes (HR 1.19, p=<0.05). Intensive lifestyle modification improved autonomic function, and higher baseline heart rate was associated with incident diabetes in the lifestyle (HR 1.19) and metformin (HR 1.17) arms (P<0.05).
Synapse has enriched 5 closely related papers on similar clinical questions. Consider them for comparative context: