超重
医学
体质指数
置信区间
心理干预
老年学
肥胖
随机对照试验
2型糖尿病
糖尿病
队列
干预(咨询)
人口学
临床试验
物理疗法
内科学
内分泌学
社会学
精神科
作者
Joni K. Evans,Chinenye O. Usoh,Felicia Simpson,Sara Espinoza,Helen P. Hazuda,Ambarish Pandey,Tara Beckner,Mark Espeland
标识
DOI:10.1093/gerona/glad088
摘要
Abstract Background Multidomain lifestyle interventions may slow aging as captured by deficit accumulation frailty indices; however, it is unknown whether benefits extend beyond intervention delivery. Methods We developed a deficit accumulation frailty index (FI-E) to span the 10 years that the Action for Health in Diabetes (Look AHEAD) randomized controlled clinical trial delivered interventions (a multidomain lifestyle intervention focused on caloric restriction, increased physical activity, and diet compared to a control condition) and to extend across an additional 8 years post-delivery. The study cohort included 5 145 individuals, aged 45–76 years at enrollment, who had type 2 diabetes and either obesity or overweight. Results Overall, FI-E scores were relatively lower among lifestyle participants throughout follow-up, averaging 0.0130 [95% confidence interval: 0.0104, 0.0156] (p < .001) less across the 18 years. During Years 1–8, the mean relative difference between control and lifestyle participants’ FI-E scores was 0.0139 [0.0115, 0.0163], approximately 10% of the baseline level. During Years 9–18, this average difference was 0.0107 [0.0066, 0.0148]. Benefits were comparable for individuals grouped by baseline age and body mass index and sex but were not evident for those entering the trial with a history of cardiovascular disease. Conclusions Multidomain lifestyle intervention may slow biological aging long term, as captured by an FI-E. Clinical Trials Registration Number: NCT00017953
科研通智能强力驱动
Strongly Powered by AbleSci AI