Jospe, Michelle R. and Liao, Yue and Giles, Erin D. and Hudson, Barry I. and Slingerland, Joyce M. and Schembre, Susan M. (2024) A low-glucose eating pattern is associated with improvements in glycemic variability among women at risk for postmenopausal breast cancer: an exploratory analysis. Frontiers in Nutrition, 11. ISSN 2296-861X
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Abstract
Background: High glycemic variability (GV) is a biomarker of cancer risk, even in the absence of diabetes. The emerging concept of chrononutrition suggests that modifying meal timing can favorably impact metabolic risk factors linked to diet-related chronic disease, including breast cancer. Here, we examined the potential of eating when glucose levels are near personalized fasting thresholds (low-glucose eating, LGE), a novel form of timed-eating, to reduce GV in women without diabetes, who are at risk for postmenopausal breast cancer.
Methods: In this exploratory analysis of our 16-week weight loss randomized controlled trial, we included 17 non-Hispanic, white, postmenopausal women (average age = 60.7 ± 5.8 years, BMI = 34.5 ± 6.1 kg/m2, HbA1c = 5.7 ± 0.3%). Participants were those who, as part of the parent study, provided 3–7 days of blinded, continuous glucose monitoring data and image-assisted, timestamped food records at weeks 0 and 16. Pearson’s correlation and multivariate regression were used to assess associations between LGE and GV, controlling for concurrent weight changes.
Results: Increases in LGE were associated with multiple unfavorable measures of GV including reductions in CGM glucose mean, CONGA, LI, J-Index, HBGI, ADDR, and time spent in a severe GV pattern (r = −0.81 to −0.49; ps < 0.044) and with increases in favorable measures of GV including M-value and LBGI (r = 0.59, 0.62; ps < 0.013). These associations remained significant after adjusting for weight changes.
Conclusion: Low-glucose eating is associated with improvements in glycemic variability, independent of concurrent weight reductions, suggesting it may be beneficial for GV-related disease prevention. Further research in a larger, more diverse sample with poor metabolic health is warranted.
Clinical trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03546972.
Item Type: | Article |
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Subjects: | Impact Archive > Multidisciplinary |
Depositing User: | Managing Editor |
Date Deposited: | 10 Apr 2024 07:27 |
Last Modified: | 10 Apr 2024 07:27 |
URI: | http://research.sdpublishers.net/id/eprint/4034 |