A low-fat vegan diet and a conventional diabetes diet in the treatment of type 2 diabetes: a randomized, controlled, 74-wk clinical trial.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to compare the effects of a low-fat vegan diet versus conventional diabetes diet recommendations on glycemia, weight, and plasma lipids in individuals with type 2 diabetes.
Results Summary
Both diets led to sustained weight loss and reduced plasma lipid concentrations, but the vegan diet showed greater improvements in glycemia and LDL cholesterol when controlling for medication changes. The differences in Hb A(1c) and lipid reductions between the diets were statistically significant in some analyses.
Population
Free-living individuals with type 2 diabetes
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
74 weeks
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
low-fat vegan diet | decrease | weight loss | individuals with type 2 diabetes | - | associated with | #1 |
low-fat vegan diet | increase | increased insulin sensitivity | - | - | associated with | #2 |
low-fat vegan diet | increase | improved cardiovascular health | - | - | associated with | #3 |
low-fat vegan diet | decrease | weight loss | individuals with type 2 diabetes | -4.4 kg | was significant | #4 |
conventional diabetes diet | decrease | weight loss | individuals with type 2 diabetes | -3.0 kg | was significant | #5 |
low-fat vegan diet | decrease | Hb A(1c) | individuals with type 2 diabetes | -0.34 | changes were | #6 |
conventional diabetes diet | decrease | Hb A(1c) | individuals with type 2 diabetes | -0.14 | changes were | #7 |
low-fat vegan diet | decrease | Hb A(1c) | individuals with type 2 diabetes | -0.40 | changes were | #8 |
conventional diabetes diet | increase | Hb A(1c) | individuals with type 2 diabetes | 0.01 | changes were | #9 |
low-fat vegan diet | decrease | total cholesterol | individuals with type 2 diabetes | 20.4 mg/dL | decreased | #10 |
conventional diabetes diet | decrease | total cholesterol | individuals with type 2 diabetes | 6.8 mg/dL | decreased | #11 |
low-fat vegan diet | decrease | LDL cholesterol | individuals with type 2 diabetes | 13.5 mg/dL | decreased | #12 |
conventional diabetes diet | decrease | LDL cholesterol | individuals with type 2 diabetes | 3.4 mg/dL | decreased | #13 |
low-fat vegan diet | increase | glycemia | individuals with type 2 diabetes | - | appeared to improve | #14 |
low-fat vegan diet | increase | plasma lipids | individuals with type 2 diabetes | - | appeared to improve | #15 |
BACKGROUND: Low-fat vegetarian and vegan diets are associated with weight loss, increased insulin sensitivity, and improved cardiovascular health. OBJECTIVE: We compared the effects of a low-fat vegan diet and conventional diabetes diet recommendations on glycemia, weight, and plasma lipids. DESIGN: Free-living individuals with type 2 diabetes were randomly assigned to a low-fat vegan diet (n = 49) or a diet following 2003 American Diabetes Association guidelines (conventional, n = 50) for 74 wk. Glycated hemoglobin (Hb A(1c)) and plasma lipids were assessed at weeks 0, 11, 22, 35, 48, 61, and 74. Weight was measured at weeks 0, 22, and 74. RESULTS: Weight loss was significant within each diet group but not significantly different between groups (-4.4 kg in the vegan group and -3.0 kg in the conventional diet group, P = 0.25) and related significantly to Hb A(1c) changes (r = 0.50, P = 0.001). Hb A(1c) changes from baseline to 74 wk or last available values were -0.34 and -0.14 for vegan and conventional diets, respectively (P = 0.43). Hb A(1c) changes from baseline to last available value or last value before any medication adjustment were -0.40 and 0.01 for vegan and conventional diets, respectively (P = 0.03). In analyses before alterations in lipid-lowering medications, total cholesterol decreased by 20.4 and 6.8 mg/dL in the vegan and conventional diet groups, respectively (P = 0.01); LDL cholesterol decreased by 13.5 and 3.4 mg/dL in the vegan and conventional groups, respectively (P = 0.03). CONCLUSIONS: Both diets were associated with sustained reductions in weight and plasma lipid concentrations. In an analysis controlling for medication changes, a low-fat vegan diet appeared to improve glycemia and plasma lipids more than did conventional diabetes diet recommendations. Whether the observed differences provide clinical benefit for the macro- or microvascular complications of diabetes remains to be established. This trial was registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00276939.