Impact of multifactorial interventions with medication and lifestyle optimization on patients with type 2 diabetes: A randomised controlled trial
Marwan El-Deyarbi, Luai Ahmed, Jeffrey King, Zelal S. Adi, Ahmed Al Juboori, Nirmin A. Mansour, Huda Al Nuaimi, Rami Beiram, Salahdein Aburuz

TL;DR
A randomized trial in Emirati patients with type 2 diabetes found that multifactorial interventions improved blood sugar control, kidney function, and cardiovascular risk factors compared to standard care.
Contribution
This study provides clinical evidence that multifactorial interventions improve diabetes outcomes in a specific population.
Findings
Multifactorial interventions led to better HbA1c control with a significant mean difference of -0.36% compared to standard care.
Participants in the intervention group showed improved eGFR levels and greater achievement of blood pressure targets.
The intervention group had reduced cardiovascular risk factors despite lower diabetes medication use.
Abstract
Clinical evidence on the protective effects of a balanced diet, exercise, and medication adherence along with intensive glucose-lowering therapies on diabetes progression is lacking, and interventions that are most effective in slowing cardiorenal metabolic complications in patients with diabetes remain unelucidated. To determine the effects of long-term multifactorial interventions on clinical outcomes in Emirati patients with diabetes attending ambulatory healthcare clinics. We conducted a randomised controlled clinical trial at the Oud Al-Touba Clinic involving 192 participants with diabetes, who were blinded to the intervention and control groups, and followed up for 1 year. At the 3-, 6-, and 9-month visits, the intervention and control groups received multifactorial interventions and standard routine care, respectively. Glycated haemoglobin A1c (HbA1c) levels, estimated…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPharmacology and Obesity Treatment · Diet and metabolism studies · Diabetes Treatment and Management
