| Literature DB >> 27098819 |
N Bhurji1, J Javer2, D Gasevic1, N A Khan3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Optimal control of type 2 diabetes is challenging in many patient populations including in South Asian patients. We systematically reviewed studies on the effect of diabetes management interventions targeted at South Asian patients with type 2 diabetes on glycaemic control.Entities:
Keywords: HEALTH SERVICES ADMINISTRATION & MANAGEMENT
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27098819 PMCID: PMC4838706 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008986
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Study flow.
Quality appraisal of trials
| Author, year | Randomised | Randomisation method | Type of randomisation | Allocation concealment | Blinding | Per cent Lost to follow-up | ITT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Middelkoop | RCT | Date of birth | NS | NS | None | NS | NS |
| Shenoy, 2009 | RCT | NS | NS | NS | None | 3 | NS |
| Shenoy, 2010 | RCT | NS | NS | NS | None | NS | Yes |
| Shantakumari | Randomised parallel study | NS | NS | NS | None | NS | NS |
| Vaishali | RCT | NS | Block | Sealed opaque envelopes | None | 5.3 | NS |
| Hawthorne | RCT | Random number tables | NS | Sealed envelopes | None | 6.5 | No |
| Adepu | RCT | NS | NS | NS | None | 14.3 | No |
| Baradaran | RCT | NS | Minimisation | NS | None | 37.3 | No |
| Ghosh | RCT | NS | NS | NS | None | Yes | NS |
| Malathy | RCT | NS | NS | NS | None | None | Yes |
| Hameed | RCT | Random number tables | NS | NS | None | Yes | Yes |
| Shetty | RCT | Random number tables | NS | NS | None | NS | No |
| O’Hare | Cluster RCT | None | NS | NS | None | 10.0 | No |
| Bellary | Cluster RCT | Simple | Simple | NS | NS | 10.8 | Yes |
| Vyas | Cluster RCT | NS | By GP practice | NS | NS | 44 | No |
| DeSouza, 2003, 2004 | Pretest post-test | Convenience sampling | NA | NA | None | NS | Yes |
| Balagopal, 2008 | Pretest post-test | NA | NA | NA | None | Yes: refusals | Yes |
| Balagopal, 2012 | Pretest post-test | NA | NA | NA | None | Yes: migration and refusals | Yes |
| Mirsa | Pretest post-test | NA | NA | NA | None | NS | Yes |
| Choudhury | Pretest post-test | NA | NA | NA | None | 8.9 | No |
| Pande | Pretest post-test | NA | NA | NA | None | NS | NS |
| Singh | Pretest post-test | NA | NA | NA | NS | NS | NS |
| Madanmohan, 2012 | Pretest post-test | NA | NA | NA | NS | <1 | Yes |
ITT, intention-to-treat; NA, not applicable; NS, not specified; RCT, randomised controlled trial.
Study characteristics by region
| Study | Country | Sample size | Design | Follow-up | Intervention type | Intervention |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mixed trials | ||||||
| O'Hare | UK (England) | 361 | Cluster RCT | 12 | Mixed/usual care | SA link workers, additional DSME from nurse |
| Bellary | UK (England) | 1486 | Cluster RCT | 24 | Mixed/usual care | SA link workers, additional DSME from nurse |
| Choudhury | UK (Wales) | 42 | Pre-post | 1 | Mixed/no control | Culturally adapted X-PERT programme |
| Vyas | UK (England) | 211 | Cluster RCT | 12 | Mixed/usual care | Diabetes nurse, dietician and chiropodist advice |
| Education trials | ||||||
| Hawthorne and Tomlimson | UK (England) | 201 | RCT | 6 | Education/usual care | Picture flashcards and structured education package delivered by link worker |
| Hawthorne | UK (England) | 199 | RCT | 6 | Education/usual care | Picture flashcards delivered by link worker (not trained in psychology) |
| Baradaran | UK (Scotland) | 118 | RCT | 6 | Education/usual care | Cultural-specific education by dietician and podiatrist, didactic and interactive group session, visual aids |
| Middelkoop | The Netherlands (South Holland) | 113 | RCT | 6 | Education/patients who received educational materials only at the end of the study | Culture-specific education materials: general diabetes information in Surinam-Hindi language and nutrition information specific to South Asian cooking—by specialist diabetes nurse and dietician |
| Mixed trials | ||||||
| Balagopal | India (Tamil Nadu) | 30 | Pre-post | 7 | Mixed/no control | Culturally and linguistically appropriate education on dietary modifications, improving physical activity and reducing stress provided by trained trainers; and education on blood glucose management by a DE |
| Balagopal | India (Gujarat) | 118 | Pre-post | 6 | Mixed/no control | Culturally and linguistically appropriate health education on dietary modifications, improving physical activity and risk for developing diabetes by CHW; education and counselling by DE. peer based; CHW; group sessions; advice on exercise and diet; Meditation, problem-solving |
| DeSouza and Subrahmanya Nairy, | India (Goa) | 60 | Pre-post | 2 | Mixed/usual care | Nurse-directed intervention (education, psychosocial support, visual aids) |
| Exercise-based trials | ||||||
| Hameed | India (Delhi) | 48 | RCT | 2 | Exercise/group on stationary cycling programme without work load and static stretching exercises | Progressive Resistance Training Program (2–3×/week) |
| Misra | India (Delhi) | 30 | Pre-post | 3 | Exercise/no control group | Progressive Resistance Training Program (3×/week) |
| Shenoy | India (Punjab) | 30 | RCT | 4 | Exercise/participants underwent no training but continued medications | Progressive resistance training (2 times per weeks) and aerobic exercise (3 times a week) |
| Shenoy | India (Punjab) | 40 | RCT | 2 | Exercise/participants underwent no training but continued medications | Aerobic walk using a heart rate monitor and pedometer to achieve a target of 150 min per week |
| Yoga-based trials: asanas (body postures) and pranayama (breathing exercises) | ||||||
| Shantakumari | India (Kerala) | 100 | RCT | 3 | Exercise/patients on OHA without yogic exercises | OHA and yoga exercises (asanas and pranayama meditation techniques) |
| Vaishali | India (Karnataka) | 57 | RCT | 3 | Exercise/received general healthy lifestyle and exercise information | Yogic exercises (asanas) and specially developed breathing techniques (pranayama) |
| Singh | India (Delhi) | 24 | Pre-post | 1.3 | Exercise | Yoga asanas |
| Madanmohan | India (Tamil Nadu) | 15 | Pre-post | 1.5 | Exercise | Yoga (asanas and pranayama) including yogic counselling and lifestyle modification advice |
| Education trials | ||||||
| Adepu | India (Kerala) | 70 | RCT | 4 | Education/pharmacist counselling at study end | Patient counselling by pharmacist |
| Ghosh | India (Uttar Pradesh) | 22 | RCT | 1.5 | Education/pharmacist counselling and information leaflets at study end | Counselling by pharmacist, information leaflets |
| Malathy | India (Tamil Nadu) | 207 | RCT | 3 | Education/patients received counselling and information leaflets at study end | Pharmacist counselling and information leaflets |
| Shetty | India (Tamil Nadu) | 215 | RCT | 12 | Education/usual care | SMS messaging on cell phones on diabetes management education |
| Diet-based trials | ||||||
| Pande | India (Maharashtra) | 15 | Pre-post | 1 | Diet/no control | Low and low-medium glycaemic load meals |
Intervention type: education, exercise, dietary or mixed (two or more intervention types).
CBA, controlled before and after experiment; CHW, community health worker; DE, diabetes educator; DSME, diabetes self-management education; OHA, oral hypoglycaemic agent; RCT, randomised controlled trial; SA, South Asian.
Patient characteristics in the studies by region
| Study author, year | Study population | Recruitment site | Age | Women | HbA1c | BMI | SBP | DBP mm Hg |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mixed trials | ||||||||
| O'Hare, 2004 | Indian, Pakistani and Bangladeshi | GP practices | 58.9 | 49 | 64 (8.0) | 145 | 81 | |
| Bellary and O'Hare, 2008 | Indian, Pakistani and Bangladeshi | Inner city GP practices | 57.0 | 48 | 63 (7.9) | 28.5 | 140 | 83 |
| Choudhury, 2008 | Bangladeshi | Urban community | 67 | |||||
| Vyas, 2003 | Pakistani | GP offices | 46 | |||||
| Education trials | ||||||||
| Hawthorne, 1997 | Pakistani | Manchester Diabetes Centre and 10 GP practices | 53 | 53 | 70 (8.5) | |||
| Hawthorne, 2001 | Pakistani | Manchester Diabetes Centre or diabetes mini clinics | 53.2 | 53 | 68 (8.4) | |||
| Baradaran, 2006 | Indian and Pakistani | Daycare centres and GP offices | 58.4 | 49 | ||||
| Middelkoop, 2001 | South Asian Surinamese | GP practice and outpatient clinics | 53.3 | 50 | 67 (8.3) | |||
| Mixed trials | ||||||||
| Balagopal, 2008 | Indian | Rural community | 35.8 | 59 | 23.3 | 133 | 93 | |
| Balagopal, 2012 | Indian | Rural community | 41.9 | 53 | 24.4 | 151 | 89 | |
| DeSouza, 2003, 2004 | Indian | Outpatient clinic, private hospitals | 41.0–60.0 | 28 | Obese I: 20% | <140 I: 93.3% C: 86.7% | ||
| Exercise-based trials | ||||||||
| Hameed, 2012 | Indian | University hospital outpatient clinics | 44.7 | 27 | 68 (8.4) | 27.3 | 130 | 79 |
| Misra, 2008 | Indian | Outpatient and diabetes clinic | 40.8 | 27 | 61 (7.7) | 24.1 | ||
| Shenoy, 2009 | Indian | University health centre | 53.4 | 47 | 62 (7.8) | |||
| Shenoy, 2010 | Indian | Outpatients | 52 | 28 | 57 (7.4) | 27 | 127 | 86 |
| Yoga-based trials | ||||||||
| Shantakumari, 2013 | South Asian | Outpatient department of holistic medicine and university-based diabetes clinic | 45.0 | 49 | 23.1 | |||
| Vaishali, 2012 | South Asian | Diabetes clinic | 65.8 | 37 | 91 (10.5) | 27.6 | ||
| Singh, 2004 | Indian | Not specified | 30–60 | 75 (9.0) | 142 | 86.7 | ||
| Madanmohan, 2012 | Indian | University hospital | 50.4 | 100 | ||||
| Education-based trials | ||||||||
| Adepu, 2007 | South Asian | Urban community pharmacies | 52.6 | 31 | ||||
| Ghosh, 2010 | South Asian | Urban hospital outpatient | >50.0 | 28 | ||||
| Malathy, 2011 | Indian | Urban pharmacies | 52.0 | 59 | 66 (8.2) | Obese I: 22.6% C: 20% | >140 | >90 I: 26.3% C: 25.8% |
| Shetty, 2011 | Indian | Outpatients | 50.2 | 75 (9.0) | 27.4 | >140/90 | ||
| Diet-based interventions | ||||||||
| Pande, 2012 | Indian | Medical College and General Hospital, diabetes outpatient department | 50.0 | 40 | 64 (8.0) | 18.0–26.0 | ||
BMI, body mass index; C, control group; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; GP, general practitioner; HbA1c, glycated haemoglobin; I, intervention group; SBP, systolic blood pressure.
Outcomes of diabetes intervention studies*
| Study | HbA1c | BG (mmol/L) | SBP (mmHg) | DBP (mmHg) | Lipids | Anthropometrics |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mixed trials in Europe | ||||||
| O'Hare | −23 (−0.0) (p=0.87) | −4.6 (p=0.035) | −3.4 (p=0.003) | TC: −0.38 (p=0.005) | ||
| Bellary | −22 (−0.2) (p=0.11) | −0.33 (p=0.76) | −1.91 (p<0.001) | TC: +0.03 (p=0.37) | BMI: +0.40 (p<0.001) | |
| Mixed trials in India | ||||||
| Balagopal | FBG: | −3.2 (p=0.48) | −5.5 (p=0.134) | BMI: +0.2 (p=0.63) | ||
| Balagopal | FBG: | I −6.2 (p<0.001) | I −0.17 (p<0.001) | BMI: I −1.02 (p<0.001) | ||
| Exercise-based trials in India | ||||||
| Hameed | −17 (−0.6) (p<0.001) | −4.79 (p=0.07) | −1.91 (p=0.28) | TC: −0.07 (p=0.53) | Weight −0.31 (p=0.36) | |
| Misra | I −18 (−0.5) (p<0.001) | FBG: | I: TC: −0.39 (p=0.003) | I: BMI: +0.1 (p=0.614) | ||
| Shenoy | PRT: −3 (−1.8) (p=0.002) | PRT: −3.83 (p=0.021) | PRT: −9 (p=0.001) | PRT: −8 (p=0.001) | ||
| Shenoy | I: −15 (−0.8) (p=0.0001) | FBG | I: +1.5 (p=0.868) | I: −10.8 (p=0.010) | BMI: I: −1.1 (p=0.0001) | |
| Yoga-based interventions in India | ||||||
| Vaishali | −15 (−0.8) (p<0.001) | FBG: | TC: −0.48 (p<0.001) | |||
| Singh | −10 (−1.2) p=0.035 | FBG: | −16 p=0.001 | −8.8 p=0.001 | ||
| Madanmohan | FBG: | TC: −0.13 p=0.01 | ||||
| Shantakumari | TC: I −0.65 (p<0.01) | Weight: I −2.6 (p<0.05) | ||||
| Education-based interventions in Europe | ||||||
| Hawthorne and Tomlimson | I −20 (−0.3) (p=NS) | I: TC 0.04 | ||||
| Hawthorne | −20 (−0.4) (p=NS) | |||||
| Middelkoop | −19 (−0.4) (p=0.02) | |||||
| Education-based interventions in India | ||||||
| Shetty | NS difference in mean HbA1c | FBG: I −1.1 | TC: I: −0.4 p<0.03 | |||
| Adepu | Capillary BG: | |||||
| Gosh | FBG: | |||||
| Malathy | Postprandial glucose: | TC: I −0.53 (p<0.001) | ||||
| Diet-based interventions India | ||||||
| Pande, 2012 | I −14 (−0.9) | FBG: | I TG −0.90 (p<0.001) | |||
*Note that 4 of the studies (Baradaran, Choudhury, Vyas and DeSouza) only included knowledge outcomes and thus were not included in this table (see (table 5)).
The numbers represent the difference in change in parameters between the intervention and control groups if not otherwise stated.
AE, aerobic exercise; BG, blood glucose; BMI, body mass index; C, control group; DBP, diastolic blood pressure; HbA1c, glycated haemoglobin; HDL-C, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol; I, intervention group; LDL-C, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; NS, not significant; PRT, progressive resistance training group; SBP, systolic blood pressure; TC, total cholesterol; TG, triglycerides; WC, waist circumference.
Change in knowledge of diabetes, its prevention, management and complications and on quality of life
| Study | Intervention | Knowledge of diabetes, its prevention, management and complications and patients’ quality of life |
|---|---|---|
| Studies based in Europe | ||
| Hawthorne and Tomlimson | Education | Change in per cent of patients correctly answering questions about
Knowledge: importance of diet (I +20%, C +6%), food group value scores (I +14%, C 1.5%), individual food value scores (I +13%, C +3.2%; adjusted difference for I is +7.8%), can manage hyperglycaemia (I +64%, C +12%), knowledge about the purpose of screening (I +48%, C baseline data missing to calculate per cent change), knowledge about diabetes complications (I +60%, C +1%) and knowledge about the role of the chiropodist (I +35%, C baseline data missing to calculate per cent change) Attitudes and behaviours: choosing correct food at wedding (I +14%, C −1.9%), glucose monitoring (I +29%, C 0%), number of people checking glucose more than once a week (I +33%, C baseline data missing to calculate per cent change), and keeping records of glucose levels (I +32%, C −7%); however, an attitude that is hard to refuse food at social events did not change after the intervention (I +10%, C +5%) |
| Hawthorne | Education | Change in scores or per cent of patients correctly answering questions related to diabetes in M and W: food knowledge scores (I: M +11%, W +14%; C: M +3%, W +4%), knowledge of eye (I: M +55%, W +63%; C: M −3%, W +4%), heart (I: M +32%, W +54%; C: M −3%, W −3%) and feet diabetes complications (I: M +47%, W +67%; C: M +9%, W +17%), knowledge of chiropody (I: M +42%, W +32%; C: M +10%, W −5%), can manage hyperglycaemia (I: M +68%, W +63%; C: M +9%, W +13%), know why to control glucose (I: M +60%, W +61%; C: M +3%, W 0%), know purpose of annual reviews (I: M +66%, W +33%; C: M +14%, W −7%), check glucose regularly (I: M +27%, W +40%; C: M −29%, W 0%) and keep glucose records (I: M +36%, W +28%; C: M −8%, W −4%)Change in scores or per cent of patients correctly answering questions related to diabetes in LW and IW: food knowledge scores (LW +12%, IW +6%), knowledge of eye (LW +59%, IW +30%), heart (LW +53%, IW +50%), and feet (LW +40%, IW +45%), diabetes complications, knowledge of chiropody (LW +42%, IW +25%), can manage hyperglycaemia (LW +53%, IW +55%), know why to control glucose (LW +71%, IW +42%), know purpose of annual checks (LW +44%, IW +42%), check glucose regularly (LW +20%, IW +17%) |
| Choudhury | Education | There was no significant change in days study participants adhered to general and specific diet, recommended exercise or foot care (SDSCA Questionnaire); no control group available. |
| Baradaran | Education | Difference in mean change in scores between I and C groups for knowledge 1.25 (p=0.27); attitude towards seriousness −0.17 (p=0.76); attitude towards complications 0.68 (p=0.38) and practice 0.76 (p=0.23).Per cent improvement in mean scores for knowledge (I intervention, EC, WC) about diabetes (I +12.5% (p=0.04); EC +5% (p=0.53); WC +12.2% (p=0.19), attitudes towards seriousness of diabetes (I +13.5% (p=0.005); EC +16.3% (p=0.001); WC +12.4% (p=0.04)), attitudes towards diabetes complications (I +8.1% (p=0.05); EC +1.5% (p=0.40); WC +6% (p=0.19)), and practice related to diabetes (I +20% (p=0.005); EC +1.7% (p=0.63); WC +25% (p=0.007)) |
| Vyas | Mixed | Knowledge awareness and self-management questionnaires validated by Hawthorne. I: 0.09 knowledge; −0.15 self-management; C: 0.02 knowledge; 0.29 self-management (differences in prescores and postscores in the I and C groups) |
| Studies based in India | ||
| Balagopal | Mixed | Knowledge score: +0.94 (p=0.085) |
| Balagopal | Mixed | Diabetes knowledge score (American Diabetes Association risk test): +0.47 (p<0.001) |
| Adepu | Education | Change in per cent of patients correctly answering questions about knowledge of diabetes definition (I +22, C no change), causes of diabetes (I +67, C −2), methods of glucose measurement (I +43, C +4), diabetes complications (kidney (I +43, C no change), eye (I +27, C −3), frequency of eye examinations (I +67, C no change)), relationship between blood pressure and kidney functioning (I +60, C +3), frequency of blood pressure measurement in patients with diabetes (I +46, C +3), role of weight reduction in diabetes (I +47, C no change), hypoglycaemia (I +39, C +2) and its prevention/management (I +44, C −3) |
| DeSouza and Subrahmanya Nairy, | Education | 2003; Quality of life scores (difference in prescores and postscores for I and C groups): |
| Malathy | Education | KAP scores (differences in pre-KAP and post-KAP scores in the I and C groups) |
C, control group; EC, ethnic control; I, intervention group; IW, illiterate women; KAP, knowledge, attitude and practice; LW, literate women; NS, not significant; M, men; W, women; WC, white control.