Higher fibre and lower carbohydrate intake are associated with favourable CGM metrics in a cross-sectional cohort of 470 individuals with type 1 diabetes

Author:

de Wit Douwe F.ORCID,Fuhri Snethlage Coco M.ORCID,Rampanelli ElenaORCID,Maasen KimORCID,Walpot Noortje,van Raalte Daniël H.ORCID,Nieuwdorp MaxORCID,Soeters Maarten R.ORCID,Hanssen Nordin M. J.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Aims/hypothesis The aim of this work was to investigate the association between macronutrient intakes and continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) metrics in individuals with type 1 diabetes. Methods In 470 individuals with type 1 diabetes of the GUTDM1 cohort (65% female, median age 40 [IQR 28–53] years, median diabetes duration 15 [IQR 6–29] years), we used logistic regression to establish associations between macronutrient intakes and the CGM metrics time in range (TIR, time spent between 3.9–10.0 mmol/l blood glucose, optimally set at ≥70%) and time below range (TBR, <3.9 mmol/l blood glucose, optimally set at <4%). ORs were expressed per 1 SD intake of nutrient and were adjusted for other macronutrient intakes, age, sex, socioeconomic status, BMI, duration of type 1 diabetes, pump use, insulin dose and alcohol intake. Results The median (IQR) TIR was 67 (51–80)% and TBR was 2 (1–4)%; the mean ± SD energy intake was 6879±2001 kJ, fat intake 75±31 g, carbohydrate intake 162±63 g, fibre intake 20±9 g and protein intake 70±24 g. A higher fibre intake and a lower carbohydrate intake were associated with higher odds of having a TIR≥70% (OR [95% CI] 1.64 [1.22, 2.24] and 0.67 [0.51, 0.87], respectively), whereas solely a higher carbohydrate intake was associated with TBR<4% (OR 1.34 [95% CI 1.02, 1.78]). Conclusions/interpretation A higher fibre intake is independently associated with a higher TIR. A higher carbohydrate intake is associated with less time spent in hypoglycaemia, a lower TIR and a higher time above range. These findings warrant confirmatory (interventional) investigations and may impact current nutritional guidelines for type 1 diabetes. Graphical Abstract

Funder

Novo Nordisk Foundation CAMIT grant 2022

Senior Clinical Dekker grant

NWO VIDI grant 2023

NWO VICI grant

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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