Overweight and Obesity in People Living With Type 1 Diabetes: A Cross‐Sectional Analysis of the BETTER Registry

Author:

Lalanne‐Mistrih Marie‐Laure123ORCID,Bonhoure Anne14ORCID,Messier Virginie1ORCID,Boudreau Valérie1ORCID,Lebbar Maha14ORCID,Talbo Meryem K.15ORCID,Sun Cathy J.67,Bandini Aude18,Secours Laurence1,Calderon Virginie1ORCID,Grou Caroline1ORCID,Tressières Benoit2ORCID,Brazeau Anne‐Sophie15ORCID,Rabasa‐Lhoret Rémi149ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Metabolic Diseases Research Unit Montreal Clinical Research Institute Montreal Canada

2. Centre d’Investigation Clinique Antilles Guyane CIC 14 24 Inserm University Hospital of Guadeloupe Les Abymes France

3. Department of Nutrition University Hospital of Guadeloupe Les Abymes France

4. Department of Nutrition Faculty of Medicine Université de Montréal Montreal Canada

5. School of Human Nutrition McGill University Sainte‐Anne‐de‐Bellevue Canada

6. Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism Department of Medicine The Ottawa Hospital Ottawa Canada

7. Ottawa Hospital Research Institute University of Ottawa Ottawa Canada

8. Department of Philosophy Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Université de Montréal Montreal Canada

9. Division of Endocrinology Centre Hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal (CHUM) Montreal Canada

Abstract

ABSTRACTAimsThe prevalence and associations of overweight and obesity in Canadian adult people living with type 1 diabetes (PWT1D) are poorly documented. In a cohort of PWT1D patients, this study assesses (i) overweight and obesity frequencies and associated PWT1D clinicodemographic characteristics, (ii) diabetes characteristics, and (iii) the use of noninsulin adjunctive agents.Materials and MethodsCross‐sectional analysis of self‐reported data from the BETTER registry: 1091 adult PWT1D (aged 44.4 ± 15.0 years; 32% HbA1c<7% [53 mmol/mol]) classified by BMI classes: underweight combined with normal weight, overweight, or obesity. Bivariate analyses were used to identify associations between BMI classes, diabetes characteristics, complications, and treatments.ResultsOverweight and obesity affected 34.6% and 19.8% of participants. Compared to underweight + normal weight, PWT1D with overweight/obesity was associated with male sex, higher age, lower education level, longer diabetes duration, and higher total insulin doses and use of cardiorenal therapies (all p < 0.001). Compared to other PWT1D, those living with obesity reported higher HbA1c (p < 0.05), less frequent hypoglycemia (p < 0.05), more cardiovascular diseases (p < 0.003), retinopathy, neuropathy, depression treatment as well as noninsulin adjunctive agent use (all p < 0.001). Logistic regression showed that living with overweight/obesity was associated with male sex, being treated for cardiorenal therapies, depression, diabetes duration, and total daily insulin doses.ConclusionsOverweight or obesity affects over half of adult PWT1D in the Canadian BETTER registry and is associated with higher HbA1c levels, higher total daily insulin doses, more chronic diabetes complications and noninsulin adjunctive agent use, a worse cardiometabolic profile, and lower hypoglycemia frequency.

Funder

Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation Canada

Strategy for Patient-Oriented Research

Eli Lilly Canada

Novo Nordisk Canada

Sanofi

Publisher

Wiley

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