Affiliation:
1. Department of Human Nutrition, College of Health Sciences, Qatar University, Doha P.O. Box 2713, Qatar
2. Faculty of Health Sciences, Nord University, 8049 Bodø, Norway
3. International Diabetes Federation, 166 Chaussee de La Hulpe, B-1170 Brussels, Belgium
4. Xi’an Jiaotong University Health Science Center, Global Health Institute, Xi’an 710061, China
Abstract
We aimed to examine the association between weight loss, dietary patterns, diabetes, and glycemic control among Qatari adults with a history of bariatric surgery (BS). Data from 1893 adults from the Qatar Biobank study were analyzed. Diabetes was defined by blood glucose, HbA1c, and medical history, with poor glycemic control defined as HbA1c ≥ 7.0%. The dietary patterns were derived from a Food Frequency Questionnaire using factor analysis. The participants’ mean age was 38.8 years, with a mean weight loss of 23.4% and a 6.1% prevalence of poor glycemic control. Weight loss was inversely associated with diabetes and poor glycemic control. The traditional dietary pattern (high intake of Biryani, chicken, meat, fish dishes, zaatar fatayer, croissant, lasagna, and Arabic bread) was inversely associated with diabetes prevalence, with an OR of 0.61 (95%CI, 0.41–0.99) when comparing extreme quartiles. No significant associations were found between prudent or sweet dietary patterns and diabetes. Among the individuals with known diabetes, the prevalence of remission was 33.4%, with an OR for remission of 5.94 (95%CI, 1.89–18.69) for the extreme quartiles of weight loss. In conclusion, weight loss and traditional dietary patterns are inversely associated with diabetes and glycemic control among adults with a history of BS, with weight loss being the main determinant.
Reference43 articles.
1. World Obesity Federation (2024, July 01). World Obesity Atlas 2024. Available online: https://www.worldobesityday.org/assets/downloads/WOF_Obesity_Atlas_2024.pdf.
2. Medical Consequences of Obesity;Bray;J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab.,2004
3. Management of obesity;Bray;Lancet,2016
4. Obesity Phenotypes, Diabetes, and Cardiovascular Diseases;Piche;Circ. Res.,2020
5. International Diabetes Federation (2023, March 06). IDF Diabetes Atlas 2021. Available online: https://diabetesatlas.org/atlas/tenth-edition/.