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Effects of high vs low glycemic index of dietary carbohydrate on cardiovascular disease risk factors and insulin sensitivity: the OmniCarb randomized clinical trial.

JAMA
January 1, 1970
Frank M Sacks et al. (13 authors)
Journal ArticleMulticenter StudyRandomized Controlled TrialResearch Support, N.I.H., ExtramuralHuman StudyClinical
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to determine the effect of glycemic index and total dietary carbohydrate content on cardiovascular disease and diabetes risk factors in overweight adults.

Results Summary

The study found that low-glycemic index diets did not improve insulin sensitivity, lipid levels, or systolic blood pressure compared to high-glycemic index diets, except for a modest reduction in triglycerides in the low-carbohydrate, low-glycemic index diet.

Population

Overweight adults with systolic blood pressure between 120-159 mm Hg.

Effective Dosage

Four diets varying in glycemic index (40% or 65%) and carbohydrate content (40% or 58% of energy).

Duration

5 weeks per diet.

Interactions

None mentioned.

Extracted Claims (11)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
low-glycemic index level at high dietary carbohydrate content
decrease
insulin sensitivity
overweight adults
-20%
decreased
#1
low-glycemic index level at high dietary carbohydrate content
increase
LDL cholesterol
overweight adults
6%
increased
#2
low-glycemic index level at high dietary carbohydrate content
no change
HDL cholesterol
overweight adults
no significant change
did not affect
#3
low-glycemic index level at high dietary carbohydrate content
no change
triglycerides
overweight adults
no significant change
did not affect
#4
low-glycemic index level at high dietary carbohydrate content
no change
blood pressure
overweight adults
no significant change
did not affect
#5
low-glycemic index level at low carbohydrate content
decrease
triglycerides
overweight adults
-5%
decreasing
#6
low-glycemic index, low-carbohydrate diet
no change
insulin sensitivity
overweight adults
no significant change
did not affect
#7
low-glycemic index, low-carbohydrate diet
no change
systolic blood pressure
overweight adults
no significant change
did not affect
#8
low-glycemic index, low-carbohydrate diet
no change
LDL cholesterol
overweight adults
no significant change
did not affect
#9
low-glycemic index, low-carbohydrate diet
no change
HDL cholesterol
overweight adults
no significant change
did not affect
#10
low-glycemic index, low-carbohydrate diet
decrease
triglycerides
overweight adults
-23%
lower
#11
Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Foods that have similar carbohydrate content can differ in the amount they raise blood glucose. The effects of this property, called the glycemic index, on risk factors for cardiovascular disease and diabetes are not well understood. OBJECTIVE: To determine the effect of glycemic index and amount of total dietary carbohydrate on risk factors for cardiovascular disease and diabetes. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Randomized crossover-controlled feeding trial conducted in research units in academic medical centers, in which 163 overweight adults (systolic blood pressure, 120-159 mm Hg) were given 4 complete diets that contained all of their meals, snacks, and calorie-containing beverages, each for 5 weeks, and completed at least 2 study diets. The first participant was enrolled April 1, 2008; the last participant finished December 22, 2010. For any pair of the 4 diets, there were 135 to 150 participants contributing at least 1 primary outcome measure. INTERVENTIONS: (1) A high-glycemic index (65% on the glucose scale), high-carbohydrate diet (58% energy); (2) a low-glycemic index (40%), high-carbohydrate diet; (3) a high-glycemic index, low-carbohydrate diet (40% energy); and (4) a low-glycemic index, low-carbohydrate diet. Each diet was based on a healthful DASH-type diet. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: The 5 primary outcomes were insulin sensitivity, determined from the areas under the curves of glucose and insulin levels during an oral glucose tolerance test; levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol, and triglycerides; and systolic blood pressure. RESULTS: At high dietary carbohydrate content, the low- compared with high-glycemic index level decreased insulin sensitivity from 8.9 to 7.1 units (-20%, P = .002); increased LDL cholesterol from 139 to 147 mg/dL (6%, P ≤ .001); and did not affect levels of HDL cholesterol, triglycerides, or blood pressure. At low carbohydrate content, the low- compared with high-glycemic index level did not affect the outcomes except for decreasing triglycerides from 91 to 86 mg/dL (-5%, P = .02). In the primary diet contrast, the low-glycemic index, low-carbohydrate diet, compared with the high-glycemic index, high-carbohydrate diet, did not affect insulin sensitivity, systolic blood pressure, LDL cholesterol, or HDL cholesterol but did lower triglycerides from 111 to 86 mg/dL (-23%, P ≤ .001). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: In this 5-week controlled feeding study, diets with low glycemic index of dietary carbohydrate, compared with high glycemic index of dietary carbohydrate, did not result in improvements in insulin sensitivity, lipid levels, or systolic blood pressure. In the context of an overall DASH-type diet, using glycemic index to select specific foods may not improve cardiovascular risk factors or insulin resistance. TRIAL REGISTRATION: clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00608049.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
AdultBlood GlucoseBlood PressureCardiovascular DiseasesCholesterol, HDLCholesterol, LDLDiet, Carbohydrate-RestrictedDietary CarbohydratesEnergy IntakeFemaleGlycemic IndexHumansInsulin ResistanceMaleMiddle AgedRisk FactorsTriglycerides
Study Links
Quality Scores
SafetyNot Assessed
Efficacy45/10
Quality85/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations151
Citations/Year13.7
Relative Citation Ratio5.61
NIH Percentile94.2%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score2.08
Normalized Score0.55
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