Pretreatment fasting glucose and insulin as determinants of weight loss on diets varying in macronutrients and dietary fibers - The POUNDS LOST Study

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiFormidling

Standard

Pretreatment fasting glucose and insulin as determinants of weight loss on diets varying in macronutrients and dietary fibers - The POUNDS LOST Study. / Hjorth, Mads Fiil; Bray, George A.; Zohar, Yishai; Urban, Lorien E; Miketinas, Derek C; Williamson, Donald A; Ryan, Donna H; Rood, Jennifer; Champagne, Catherine M; Sacks, Frank M; Astrup, Arne.

Personalized Nutrition. red. / George Moschonis; Katherine Livingstone; Jessica Biesiekierski. Basel : Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2019. s. 73-84.

Publikation: Bidrag til bog/antologi/rapportBidrag til bog/antologiFormidling

Harvard

Hjorth, MF, Bray, GA, Zohar, Y, Urban, LE, Miketinas, DC, Williamson, DA, Ryan, DH, Rood, J, Champagne, CM, Sacks, FM & Astrup, A 2019, Pretreatment fasting glucose and insulin as determinants of weight loss on diets varying in macronutrients and dietary fibers - The POUNDS LOST Study. i G Moschonis, K Livingstone & J Biesiekierski (red), Personalized Nutrition. Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, Basel, s. 73-84. <https://www.mdpi.com/books/pdfview/book/1514>

APA

Hjorth, M. F., Bray, G. A., Zohar, Y., Urban, L. E., Miketinas, D. C., Williamson, D. A., Ryan, D. H., Rood, J., Champagne, C. M., Sacks, F. M., & Astrup, A. (2019). Pretreatment fasting glucose and insulin as determinants of weight loss on diets varying in macronutrients and dietary fibers - The POUNDS LOST Study. I G. Moschonis, K. Livingstone, & J. Biesiekierski (red.), Personalized Nutrition (s. 73-84). Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute. https://www.mdpi.com/books/pdfview/book/1514

Vancouver

Hjorth MF, Bray GA, Zohar Y, Urban LE, Miketinas DC, Williamson DA o.a. Pretreatment fasting glucose and insulin as determinants of weight loss on diets varying in macronutrients and dietary fibers - The POUNDS LOST Study. I Moschonis G, Livingstone K, Biesiekierski J, red., Personalized Nutrition. Basel: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute. 2019. s. 73-84

Author

Hjorth, Mads Fiil ; Bray, George A. ; Zohar, Yishai ; Urban, Lorien E ; Miketinas, Derek C ; Williamson, Donald A ; Ryan, Donna H ; Rood, Jennifer ; Champagne, Catherine M ; Sacks, Frank M ; Astrup, Arne. / Pretreatment fasting glucose and insulin as determinants of weight loss on diets varying in macronutrients and dietary fibers - The POUNDS LOST Study. Personalized Nutrition. red. / George Moschonis ; Katherine Livingstone ; Jessica Biesiekierski. Basel : Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2019. s. 73-84

Bibtex

@inbook{ba25b468ad324c86ba7aad294b9af9a7,
title = "Pretreatment fasting glucose and insulin as determinants of weight loss on diets varying in macronutrients and dietary fibers - The POUNDS LOST Study",
abstract = "Efforts to identify a preferable diet for weight management based on macronutrient composition have largely failed, but recent evidence suggests that satiety effects of carbohydrates may depend on the individual's insulin-mediated cellular glucose uptake. Therefore, using data from the POUNDS LOST trial, pre-treatment fasting plasma glucose (FPG), fasting insulin (FI), and homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) were studied as prognostic markers of long-term weight loss in four diets differing in carbohydrate, fat, and protein content, while assessing the role of dietary fiber intake. Subjects with FPG <100 mg/dL lost 2.6 (95% CI 0.9;4.4, p = 0.003) kg more on the low-fat/high-protein (n = 132) compared to the low-fat/average-protein diet (n = 136). Subjects with HOMA-IR ≥4 lost 3.6 (95% CI 0.2;7.1, p = 0.038) kg more body weight on the high-fat/high-protein (n = 35) compared to high-fat/average-protein diet (n = 33). Regardless of the randomized diet, subjects with prediabetes and FI below the median lost 5.6 kg (95% CI 0.6;10.6, p = 0.030) more when consuming ≥35 g (n = 15) compared to <35 g dietary fiber/10 MJ (n = 16). Overall, subjects with normal glycemia lost most on the low-fat/high-protein diet, subjects with high HOMA-IR lost most on the high-fat/high protein diet, and subjects with prediabetes and low FI had particular benefit from dietary fiber in the diet.",
keywords = "Faculty of Science, Glucose, Insulin, Weight, Diet, Mcronutrient composition, Clinical nutrition",
author = "Hjorth, {Mads Fiil} and Bray, {George A.} and Yishai Zohar and Urban, {Lorien E} and Miketinas, {Derek C} and Williamson, {Donald A} and Ryan, {Donna H} and Jennifer Rood and Champagne, {Catherine M} and Sacks, {Frank M} and Arne Astrup",
note = "A printed edition of the special issue published online in the open access journal Nutrients (ISSN: 2072-6643) from 2018 to 2019.",
year = "2019",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-3-03921-445-7",
pages = "73--84",
editor = "George Moschonis and Katherine Livingstone and Jessica Biesiekierski",
booktitle = "Personalized Nutrition",
publisher = "Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute",
address = "Switzerland",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - Pretreatment fasting glucose and insulin as determinants of weight loss on diets varying in macronutrients and dietary fibers - The POUNDS LOST Study

AU - Hjorth, Mads Fiil

AU - Bray, George A.

AU - Zohar, Yishai

AU - Urban, Lorien E

AU - Miketinas, Derek C

AU - Williamson, Donald A

AU - Ryan, Donna H

AU - Rood, Jennifer

AU - Champagne, Catherine M

AU - Sacks, Frank M

AU - Astrup, Arne

N1 - A printed edition of the special issue published online in the open access journal Nutrients (ISSN: 2072-6643) from 2018 to 2019.

PY - 2019

Y1 - 2019

N2 - Efforts to identify a preferable diet for weight management based on macronutrient composition have largely failed, but recent evidence suggests that satiety effects of carbohydrates may depend on the individual's insulin-mediated cellular glucose uptake. Therefore, using data from the POUNDS LOST trial, pre-treatment fasting plasma glucose (FPG), fasting insulin (FI), and homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) were studied as prognostic markers of long-term weight loss in four diets differing in carbohydrate, fat, and protein content, while assessing the role of dietary fiber intake. Subjects with FPG <100 mg/dL lost 2.6 (95% CI 0.9;4.4, p = 0.003) kg more on the low-fat/high-protein (n = 132) compared to the low-fat/average-protein diet (n = 136). Subjects with HOMA-IR ≥4 lost 3.6 (95% CI 0.2;7.1, p = 0.038) kg more body weight on the high-fat/high-protein (n = 35) compared to high-fat/average-protein diet (n = 33). Regardless of the randomized diet, subjects with prediabetes and FI below the median lost 5.6 kg (95% CI 0.6;10.6, p = 0.030) more when consuming ≥35 g (n = 15) compared to <35 g dietary fiber/10 MJ (n = 16). Overall, subjects with normal glycemia lost most on the low-fat/high-protein diet, subjects with high HOMA-IR lost most on the high-fat/high protein diet, and subjects with prediabetes and low FI had particular benefit from dietary fiber in the diet.

AB - Efforts to identify a preferable diet for weight management based on macronutrient composition have largely failed, but recent evidence suggests that satiety effects of carbohydrates may depend on the individual's insulin-mediated cellular glucose uptake. Therefore, using data from the POUNDS LOST trial, pre-treatment fasting plasma glucose (FPG), fasting insulin (FI), and homeostatic model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) were studied as prognostic markers of long-term weight loss in four diets differing in carbohydrate, fat, and protein content, while assessing the role of dietary fiber intake. Subjects with FPG <100 mg/dL lost 2.6 (95% CI 0.9;4.4, p = 0.003) kg more on the low-fat/high-protein (n = 132) compared to the low-fat/average-protein diet (n = 136). Subjects with HOMA-IR ≥4 lost 3.6 (95% CI 0.2;7.1, p = 0.038) kg more body weight on the high-fat/high-protein (n = 35) compared to high-fat/average-protein diet (n = 33). Regardless of the randomized diet, subjects with prediabetes and FI below the median lost 5.6 kg (95% CI 0.6;10.6, p = 0.030) more when consuming ≥35 g (n = 15) compared to <35 g dietary fiber/10 MJ (n = 16). Overall, subjects with normal glycemia lost most on the low-fat/high-protein diet, subjects with high HOMA-IR lost most on the high-fat/high protein diet, and subjects with prediabetes and low FI had particular benefit from dietary fiber in the diet.

KW - Faculty of Science

KW - Glucose

KW - Insulin

KW - Weight

KW - Diet

KW - Mcronutrient composition

KW - Clinical nutrition

M3 - Book chapter

SN - 978-3-03921-445-7

SP - 73

EP - 84

BT - Personalized Nutrition

A2 - Moschonis, George

A2 - Livingstone, Katherine

A2 - Biesiekierski, Jessica

PB - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute

CY - Basel

ER -

ID: 226881797