Diabetes Mellitus, Type 1 Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Effects of a Low Carbohydrate, Non-Ketogenic Diet Versus Standard Diabetes Diet on Glycemic Control in Type 1 Diabetes
This randomized, crossover nutrition intervention seeks to examine the effects of a non-ketogenic low carbohydrate (CHO) diet (60-80g per day) on glycemic control, lipids, and markers on inflammation in individuals with Type 1 Diabetes (T1D). This study will be used to inform clinical practice, especially in teaching medical nutrition therapy to new-onset diabetes patients and those struggling with glycemic control and hyperlipidemia. At this time, no evidenced-based universal recommendations from randomized controlled trials exist to support low carbohydrate dietary patterns as a front-line approach in individuals with T1D. The investigators hypothesize a diet consisting of 60-80 g carbohydrate diet will result in greater improvement in glycemic control compared to a 50% carbohydrate diet in patients with Type 1 diabetes over 12 weeks in the outpatient setting.
Type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1D) is marked by total insulin dependence with challenges
regarding glycemic control and concomitant sequela. While standard of care medical nutrition
therapy for this disease centers on matching carbohydrate to insulin at meals, recent
literature and clinical reports have shown superior glycemic control and cardiovascular
measures with lower carbohydrate dietary patterns (<130g/day) as compared to the standard
American MyPlate (50% total calories as carbohydrate) approach. Diabetes management has
evolved tremendously in the last twenty years with the development of sophisticated insulin
pumps and continuous glucose monitors; but, glycemic control is still dependent on
quantification of carbohydrate, imperfect in the real-world setting. Due to inherent error in
carbohydrate counting, the investigators propose that less carbohydrate will produce better
glycemic control by minimizing error and subsequent variation in individuals with type 1
diabetes.
There has long been a movement in the medical community to prescribe low carbohydrate diets
under the premise of "less carbohydrate, less insulin, less glycemic variation". This
strategy centers on "the law of small numbers", a calculus principle describing magnitude of
variation in the output (glycemic variation) as the function of input size (CHO + insulin).
Carbohydrate counting tends to result in ~50% error while there is ~30% variation in insulin
action, making exactitude impossible. However, low CHO diets tend to provide >40% energy from
fat due to the macronutrient distribution. With innate risk of cardiovascular disease in T1D,
standard of care has supported restriction of total fat consumption, especially saturated
fat, in effort to control cholesterol. While the American Diabetes Association recognizes
that dietary fat is a controversial and complex issue, eliminating trans-fats is the only
consensus point across the field. To date, most low CHO diet studies in both T1D and Type 2
Diabetes (T2D) have not shown adverse effects on lipids and tend to show decreases in
triglycerides and either no change or increases in HDL, LDL, and total cholesterol.
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