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The Effect of an Online Plant-Based Dietary Program on Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Persons With Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus: A Randomized Controlled Trial

Recruiting
18 years of age
Both
Phase N/A

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Overview

Persons with Type 2 Diabetes (T2D) are at an increased risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and mortality. Dietary changes are recommended by guidelines to treat T2D and reduce risk of CVD. Plant-based diets eliminate certain (i.e. vegetarian diet) or eliminate all animal based products (i.e. vegan diet). Clinical trials with plant-based diets have not looked at incidence of CVD as a (primary) outcome, but at intermediate outcomes of cardiovascular risk. A meta-analysis of 8 trials including 369 persons with T2D found an effect of a plant-based diet on glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) of -0.29% [95% CI: -0.45, -0.12%] relative to mostly (omnivorous) low-fat diets or usual diet. The 95%CI ranged from what the authors had defined as clinically trivial to clinically relevant. For lipids, a network meta-analysis in persons with T2D compared the effect of a plant-based diet to a (omnivorous) low fat diet (274 patients allocated to a plant-based diet vs 2047 patients allocated to low fat diets). Compared to omnivorous low fat diets, the mean effect of plant-based diets on LDL-Cholesterol was -0.33 mmol/L [95%CI:- 0.55, - 0.12]. However, the quality of the evidence for this estimate was graded as low, mainly due to imprecision and within-study-bias. Furthermore, plant-based diets might reduce blood pressure (BP). However, while vegetarian diets reduce BP in patients with and without hypertension, for vegan diets the effect was only significant in patients with a systolic BP>130mmHgz (see section 1.4.3). Additionally, the effect of plant-based diets on inflammation, which might also be causally related to CVD risk in persons with T2D, has not been reported in trials with persons with T2D. Furthermore, most clinical trials of plant-based diets in persons with T2D have used resource intensive interventions, like weekly group meetings and cooking sessions. The effect of an online plant-based dietary intervention, which is more scalable, has not been reported in clinical trials. Lastly, factors influencing adherence in these trials have not been reported.

In summary, plant-based diets likely lower CVD risk by lowering HbA1c, LDL cholesterol and potentially blood pressure in persons with T2D. However, estimated effect sizes are imprecise and the effect on inflammation is still unknown. Furthermore, trials to date have used resource intensive interventions. Thus, the present trial aims to study the effect of a primarily online plant-based dietary program on (cardio)vascular risk factors in persons with T2D. Additionally, adherence and factors influencing adherence will be investigated. Participants will be randomized to the intervention or control group. The intervention group will be guided to transition to a plant-based dietary pattern using an online platform and online sessions. Researchers will compare the intervention group to the control group, that continues with usual diet, to see if the cardiovascular risk profile of the intervention group improves.

Eligibility

Inclusion criteria

  1. Diagnosis of Type 2 Diabetes made by a physician
  2. Using oral glucose-lowering medication and/or an insulin regime with a stable dose during at least the last two months before the screening visit;
  3. Diagnosis of type 2 diabetes was made more than one year ago
  4. Age of 18 years or older on the day of signing the informed consent form.
  5. When the patients is also using lipid-lowering and/or blood pressure-lowering medication, than the dose should be stable for at least two months before the screening.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Insulin-dependent type 2 diabetes in combination with hypoglycemia unawareness. Hypoglycemia unawareness is defined as the onset of hypoglycemia before the appearance of autonomic symptoms or failure to recognize hypoglycemia.
  2. Two or more episodes of severe hypoglycemia (glucose < 3 mmol/L) during the last 3 months;
  3. Uncontrolled T2D, defined as a HbA1c >86 mmol/mol (>10%);
  4. Uncontrolled hypertension, defined as an office systolic blood pressure ≥ 180mmHg;
  5. Inability to attend at least 60% of the scheduled meetings;
  6. Pregnancy or a wish to get pregnant during the study period;
  7. Diagnosis of familial hypercholesterolemia;
  8. Being diagnosed with osteoporosis.
  9. Known vitamin B12 deficiency, defined as serum vitamin B12 <130 pmol/L or using vitamin B12 supplements prescribed by a physician;
  10. Known iron deficiency defined as a serum ferritin < 25µg/L for males or < 20µg/L for females or using iron supplements prescribed by a physician;;
  11. The presence of any disease for which the patients uses a specific diet and where transitioning to a plant-based diet might lead to unfavorable effects on this disease as judged by the research team and/or the treating physician. An exception is a salt-restricted diet for hypertension;
  12. Current or planned participation in any other interventional study within 30 days of signing the informed consent form;
  13. Any medical, social or physiological circumstance which might interfere with the study, based on judgement by the principal investigator.

Study details

Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, Diet, Vegetarian, Diet

NCT05777746

UMC Utrecht

25 January 2024

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