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The primary hypothesis is to investigate whether a low calorie diet for 7 weeks followed by continuous lifestyle advice is an effective option to achieve an improvement in glucose control as measured by HbA1c after 52 and 104 weeks as compared to baseline values in obese type 2 diabetes patients on either tablet or insulin treatment. The secondary hypothesis is to investigate whether the weight reduction therapy also has significant impact on various anthropometric, clinical and metabolic parameters associated with obesity.
Full description
This is a prospective study on the impact of low calorie diet followed by a weight maintenance program on 12 and 24 month glucose control in a cohort of patients with obesity and diabetes mellitus. The study will consist of 3 phases:
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Pregnant or brest-feeding women or women who are planning to become pregnant or breast-feeding.
Type 1 diabetes mellitus or secondary forms of diabetes including pancreatic injury, cushing syndrome etc.
Clinically significant diabetic complications
Clinically symptomatic gastrointestinal or hepatic disease.
History of gastric bypass, antrectomy or small bowel disease.
History of pancreatitis.
Myocardial infarction within the past six months.
Symptomatic ischemic heart disease, heart failure or stroke.
Atrial fibrillation.
Patients on treatment with warfarin.
Diagnosed and/or treated malignancy within the past 5 years.
Any of the following laboratory abnormalities at screening:
History of alcohol or other substance abuse within the past 2 years.
Psychiatric disease including eating disorder, bulimia nervosa, depression, anxiety, psychotic disease.
Potentially unreliable patients and those judged by the investigator to be unsuitable for the study.
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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40 participants in 1 patient group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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