2.2.0.0 The Di­a­betes Pre­ven­tion Pro­gram

Sev­er­al major ran­dom­ized con­trolled tri­als, in­clud­ing the Di­a­betes Pre­ven­tion Pro­gram (DPP) (1), the Finnish Di­a­betes Pre­ven­tion Study (DPS) (2), and the Da Qing Di­a­betes Pre­ven­tion Study (Da Qing study) (3), demon­strate that lifestyle/‍ be­hav­ioral ther­a­py fea­tur­ing an in­di­vid­u­al­ized re­duced calo­rie meal plan is high­ly ef­fec­tive in pre­vent­ing type 2 di­a­betes and im­prov­ing other car­diometabol­ic mark­ers (such as blood pres­sure, lipids, and inflam­ma­tion). The strongest ev­i­dence for di­a­betes pre­ven­tion comes from the DPP trial (1). The DPP demon­strated that an in­ten­sive lifestyle in­ter­ven­tion could re­duce the in­ci­dence of type 2 di­a­betes by 58% over 3 years. Fol­low-‍up of three large stud­ies of lifestyle in­ter­ven­tion for di­a­betes pre­ven­tion has shown sus­tained re­duc­tion in the rate of con­ver­sion to type 2 di­a­betes: 45% re­duc­tion at 23 years in the Da Qing study (3), 43% re­duc­tion at 7 years in the DPS (2), and 34% re­duc­tion at 10 years (4) and 27% re­duc­tion at 15 years (5) in the U.S. Di­a­betes Pre­ven­tion Pro­gram Out­comes Study (DPPOS). No­tably, in the 23-year fol­low-‍up for the Da Qing study, re­duc­tions in all-‍cause mor­tal­i­ty and car­dio­vas­cu­lar dis­ease–re­lat­ed mor­tal­i­ty were ob­served for the lifestyle in­ter­ven­tion groups com­pared with the con­trol group (3).

The two major goals of the DPP in­ten­sive, be­hav­ioral, lifestyle in­ter­ven­tion were to achieve and main­tain a min­i­mum of 7% weight loss and 150 min of phys­i­cal ac­tiv­i­ty sim­i­lar in in­ten­si­ty to brisk walk­ing per week. The DPP lifestyle in­ter­ven­tion was a goal-‍based in­ter­ven­tion: all par­tic­i­pants were given the same weight loss and phys­i­cal ac­tiv­i­ty goals, but in­di­vid­u­al­iza­tion was per­mit­ted in the specific meth­ods used to achieve the goals (6).

The 7% weight loss goal was se­lect­ed be­cause it was fea­si­ble to achieve and main­tain and like­ly to lessen the risk of de­vel­op­ing di­a­betes. Par­tic­i­pants were en­cour­aged to achieve the 7% weight loss dur­ing the first 6 months of the in­ter­ven­tion. How­ev­er, longer-‍term (4-year) data re­veal max­i­mal pre­ven­tion of di­a­betes ob­served at about 7–10% weight loss (7). The rec­om­mend­ed pace of weight loss was 122 lb/‍week. Calo­rie goals were cal­cu­lat­ed by es­ti­mat­ing the daily calo­ries need­ed to main­tain the par­tic­i­pant’s ini­tial weight and sub­tract­ing 50021,000 calo­ries/day (de­pend­ing on ini­tial body weight). The ini­tial focus was on re­duc­ing total di­etary fat. After sev­er­al weeks, the con­cept of calo­rie bal­ance and the need to re­strict calo­ries as well as fat was in­tro­duced (6).

The goal for phys­i­cal ac­tiv­i­ty was se­lect­ed to ap­prox­i­mate at least 700 kcal/ week ex­pen­di­ture from phys­i­cal ac­tiv­i­ty. For ease of trans­la­tion, this goal was de­scribed as at least 150 min of moderate-in­ten­si­ty phys­i­cal ac­tiv­i­ty per week sim­i­lar in in­ten­si­ty to brisk walk­ing. Par­tic­i­pants were en­cour­aged to dis­tribute their ac­tiv­i­ty through­out the week with a min­i­mum fre­quen­cy of three times per week with at least 10 min per ses­sion. A max­i­mum of 75 min of strength train­ing could be ap­plied to­ward the total 150 min/‍week phys­i­cal ac­tiv­i­ty goal (6). To im­ple­ment the weight loss and phys­i­cal ac­tiv­i­ty goals, the DPP used an in­di­vid­u­al model of treat­ment rather than a group-‍based ap­proach. This choice was based on a de­sire to in­ter­vene be­fore par­tic­i­pants had the pos­si­bil­i­ty of de­vel­op­ing di­a­betes or los­ing in­ter­est in the pro­gram. The in­di­vid­u­al ap­proach also al­lowed for tai­lor­ing of in­ter­ven­tions to reflect the di­ver­si­ty of the pop­u­la­tion (6). The DPP in­ter­ven­tion was ad­min­is­tered as a struc­tured core cur­ricu­lum fol­lowed by a more flex­i­ble main­te­nance pro­gram of in­di­vid­u­al ses­sions, group class­es, mo­ti­va­tion­al cam­paigns, and restart op­por­tu­ni­ties. The 16-‍ses­sion core cur­ricu­lum was com­plet­ed with­in the first 24 weeks of the pro­gram and in­clud­ed sec­tions on low­er­ing calo­ries, in­creas­ing phys­i­cal ac­tiv­i­ty, self-‍mon­i­tor­ing, main­taining healthy lifestyle be­hav­iors, and psy­cho­log­i­cal, so­cial, and mo­ti­va­tion­al chal­lenges. For fur­ther de­tails on the core cur­ricu­lum ses­sions, refer to ref. 6.