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The insulin resistance phenotype (muscle or liver) interacts with the type of diet to determine changes in disposition index after 2 years of intervention: the CORDIOPREV-DIAB randomised clinical trial

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Date

2015-09-08

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Blanco-Rojo, Ruth
Alcala-Diaz, Juan F.
Wopereis, Suzan
Perez-Martinez, Pablo
Quintana-Navarro, Gracia M.
Marin, Carmen
Ordovas, Jose M.
van Ommen, Ben
Perez-Jimenez, Francisco
Delgado-Lista, Javier

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Springer
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Aims/hypothesis The aim of the study was to determine whether basal insulin resistance (IR) phenotype (muscle and/or liver) determines the effect of long-term consumption of a Mediterranean diet or a low-fat diet on tissue-specific IR and beta cell function.Methods The study was performed in 642 patients included in The effect of an olive oil rich Mediterranean diet on type 2 diabetes mellitus risk and incidence study (CORDIOPREVDIAB). A total of 327 patients were randomised to a Mediterranean diet (35% fat; 22% from monounsaturated fatty acids) and 315 to a low-fat diet (<28% fat). At baseline, the patients were classified into four phenotypes according to the type of IR: (1) no IR; (2) muscle IR; (3) liver IR; (4) muscle+liver IR. The hepatic insulin resistance index (HIRI), muscular insulin sensitivity index (MISI) and disposition index were analysed at baseline and after 2 years of follow-up. Results At baseline, 322 patients presented no IR, 106 presented muscle IR, 109 presented liver IR, and 105 presented muscle+liver IR. With both dietary interventions, HIRI decreased in all patients (p<0.001) and MISI increased in muscle IR and muscle+liver IR patients (p<0.01). Long-term intake of the Mediterranean diet increased the disposition index and insulinogenic index in the muscle IR patients (p=0.042 and p=0.044, respectively) and the disposition index in the muscle+liver IR patients (p=0.048), whereas the low-fat diet increased the disposition index in the liver IR patients (p=0.017). Conclusions/interpretation Although both diets improve insulin sensitivity, there are differences based on basal IR phenotypes. Moreover, according to insulinogenic and disposition index data, a low-fat diet might be more beneficial topatients with liver IR, whereas patients with muscle IR and muscle+liver IR might benefit more from a Mediterranean diet.

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MeSH Terms

Insulin resistance
Olive oil
Diabetes mellitus, type 2
Diet, fat-restricted
Diet, mediterranean
Follow-up studies
Liver
Fatty acids, monounsaturated
Phenotype
Muscles

DeCS Terms

Aceite de oliva
Diabetes mellitus tipo 2
Dieta mediterránea
Dieta con restricción de grasas
Estudios de seguimiento
Hígado
Resistencia a la insulina

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Keywords

Beta cell function, Dietary intervention, Insulin resistance, Low-fat diet, Mediterranean diet, Mediterranean diet, Glucose-tolerance, Skeletal-muscle, Life-style, Prevention, Sensitivity, Health, Risk, Metabolism, Secretion

Citation

Blanco-Rojo R, Alcala-Diaz JF, Wopereis S, Perez-Martinez P, Quintana-Navarro GM, Marin C, et al. The insulin resistance phenotype (muscle or liver) interacts with the type of diet to determine changes in disposition index after 2 years of intervention: the CORDIOPREV-DIAB randomised clinical trial. Diabetologia. 2016 Jan;59(1):67-76