Prediabetes: 3 lifestyle changes lower chronic disease risk by 21%

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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For prediabetes, lifestyle shifts may beat metformin at cutting multiple chronic disease risks. lechatnoir/Getty Images
  • Prediabetes is a condition where blood sugar levels are higher than normal, and without intervention, it can lead to type 2 diabetes.
  • It also increases the risk of many other chronic conditions, including heart disease and stroke.
  • A new study has found that, in a group of adults with prediabetes, lifestyle modifications were more effective at preventing multiple chronic conditions, including type 2 diabetes, than metformin or placebo.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, more than 2 in 5 adults in the United States have prediabetes, a condition where blood glucose levels are higher than they should be, but not as high as in type 2 diabetes.

Risk factors for developing prediabetes include having overweight or obesity, being at least 45 years old, having a close relative with type 2 diabetes, having ever had gestational (pregnancy) diabetes, or given birth to a baby weighing more than 9lbs (4kg).

People with prediabetes are at risk of developing a number of chronic health conditions, as well as progressing to type 2 diabetes, and often end up with multimorbidity — having 2 or more chronic conditions.

A number of lifestyle changes, including losing weight, being more physically active, and adopting a Healthier diet, can help prevent this. If these changes do not lower blood glucose, clinicians may prescribe the type 2 diabetes drug Health">metformin.

However, a study published in JAMA has shown that lifestyle modifications may be more effective than metformin for preventing multimorbidity in people with prediabetes.

“This is a very important finding because it shifts the conversation from preventing a single disease to promoting long-term health across multiple organ systems. The study showed that lifestyle intervention not only reduced progression to diabetes but also lowered the risk of developing multiple chronic conditions over more than two decades of follow-up. That is particularly meaningful given the growing burden of multimorbidity in aging populations.”

– Thomas M. Holland, Physician Scientist and Assistant Professor, Department of Internal Medicine, RUSH Institute for Healthy Aging, Chicago, who was not involved in the study.

In total, 82% of the lifestyle group, 85% of the metformin group, and 87% of the placebo group had 2 or more chronic conditions.

However, while 81% of both the placebo and metformin groups had more than 3 chronic conditions, just 72% of the lifestyle group did.

“Lifestyle interventions are likely more effective because they target several different biological pathways simultaneously, rather than focusing on a single aspect of a disease. Metformin is an important and effective medication that primarily improves insulin sensitivity and reduces glucose production by the liver. Lifestyle changes are multifaceted and influence far more than blood sugar,” Holland told Medical News Today.

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