Nancy A. Melville 3 minutes
A diet rich in vegetables and low in carbs — a so-called low glycemic index (GI) diet ― is associated with clinically significant benefits beyond those provided by existing medications for people with type 1 and type 2 diabetes, compared with a higher glycemic diet, findings from a new meta-analysis show.
“Although the effects were small, which is not surprising in clinical trials in nutrition, they were clinically meaningful improvements for which our certainty in the effects were moderate to high,” first author Laura Chiavaroli, PhD, of the Department of Nutritional Sciences, Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, told Medscape Medical News.
The GI rates foods on the basis of how quickly they affect blood glucose levels.
Fruits, vegetables, and whole grains have a low GI. They also help to regulate blood sugar levels. Such foods are linked to a reduced risk for heart disease among people with diabetes.
But guidelines on this ― such as those from the European Association for the Study of Diabetes ― reflect research published more than 15 years ago, before several key trials were published.
Chiavaroli and her colleagues identified 27 randomized controlled trials ― the most recent of which was published in May 2021 ― that involved a total of 1617 adult participants with type 1 or 2 diabetes. For the patients in these trials, diabetes was moderately controlled with glucose-lowering drugs or insulin. All of the included trials examined the effects of a low GI diet or a low glycemic load (GL) diet for people with diabetes over a period 3 or more weeks. The majority of patients in the studies were overweight or had obesity, and they were largely middle-aged.
The meta-analysis, which included new data, was published in The BMJ. The study “expands the number of relevant intermediate cardiometabolic outcomes, and assesses the certainty of the evidence using GRADE [grading of recommendations assessment, development, and evaluation],” Chiavaroli and colleagues note.
“The available evidence provides a good indication of the likely benefit in this population and supports existing recommendations for the use of low GI dietary patterns in the management of diabetes,” they emphasize.
Medscape Medical News © 2021
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Cite this: Low Glycemic Diet Improves A1c, Other Risk Factors in Diabetes – Medscape – Aug 10, 2021.