| Literature DB >> 29403436 |
Ben van Ommen1, Suzan Wopereis1, Pepijn van Empelen2, Hilde M van Keulen2, Wilma Otten2, Marise Kasteleyn3, Johanna J W Molema4, Iris M de Hoogh1, Niels H Chavannes3, Mattijs E Numans3, Andrea W M Evers5,6, Hanno Pijl7.
Abstract
From a biological view, most of the processes involved in insulin resistance, which drives the pathobiology of type 2 diabetes, are reversible. This theoretically makes the disease reversible and curable by changing dietary habits and physical activity, particularly when adopted early in the disease process. Yet, this is not fully implemented and exploited in health care due to numerous obstacles. This article reviews the state of the art in all areas involved in a diabetes cure-focused therapy and discusses the scientific and technological advancements that need to be integrated into a systems approach sustainable lifestyle-based healthcare system and economy. The implementation of lifestyle as cure necessitates personalized and sustained lifestyle adaptations, which can only be established by a systems approach, including all relevant aspects (personalized diagnosis and diet, physical activity and stress management, self-empowerment, motivation, participation and health literacy, all facilitated by blended care and ehealth). Introduction of such a systems approach in type 2 diabetes therapy not only requires a concerted action of many stakeholders but also a change in healthcare economy, with new winners and losers. A "call for action" is put forward to actually initiate this transition. The solution provided for type 2 diabetes is translatable to other lifestyle-related disorders.Entities:
Keywords: cure; ehealth; lifestyle; nutrition; reversible; system; type 2 diabetes
Year: 2018 PMID: 29403436 PMCID: PMC5786854 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2017.00381
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Systems view on processes involved in glucose control and type 2 diabetes. The processes (nodes) are colored according to their involvement with organs (see legend). Blue arrows (edges) indicate a positive effect of one process on another, red arrows indicate a negative effect.
Type 2 diabetes subgroup (process) dependent diagnosis–intervention strategies.
| T2D subgroups (see Figure | Diagnosis (i.e., parameters of the biopassport) | Potential interventions |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Pancreatic β-cell function (impaired insulin secretion) | Oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) or challenge test: disposition index | Fasting-mimicking diet (FMD); β-cell protective nutrients (MUFA, protein, vit. K, Mg, leucine); β-cell protective drugs (TZDs, GLP-1 analogs, DPP4-inhibition) |
| 2. Muscle insulin resistance (decreased glucose uptake) | OGTT or challenge test: muscle IR index, HbA1C, 2-h glucose | Physical activity (resistance training); Mediterranean diet; low-glycemic index diet; low-carb diet; low refined sugar; fiber (arabinoxylan, alpha-cyclodextrin, resistant starch, beta-glucans) |
| 3. Hepatic insulin resistance (decreased glucose uptake, but increased production and release) | OGTT or challenge test: hepatic IR index, fasting glucose | Low (saturated) fat diet; weight loss; very low-caloric diet; intermittent fasting; wholegrain; choline; carnitine; resveratrol; cinnamon extract; metformin |
| 4. Adipocyte insulin resistance and lipotoxicity | Basal adipocyte insulin resistance index, non-esterified fatty acids, visceral and ectopic fat percentage | Intermittent fasting; FMD; α-lipoic acid; poly-unsaturated fatty acid/SFA balance; omega-3 FAs; TZDs; acipimox |
| 5. Vasculature | Blood pressure, LDL-cholesterol, HDL-cholesterol, fasting, and post-prandial triglycerides | DASH diet; low-sodium diet; wholegrain; fiber (pectin, β-glucan); beet root (extract); lycopene; Vit. C; Vit. K; cocoa flavonols; hydroxytyrosol (olive oil); monacolin K; coenzyme Q10; grape seed extract; chitosan/phytosterols; |
| 6. Chronic low-grade inflammation | CRP, total leukocytes, cytokines | Physical activity; fish oil/n-3 fatty acids; Vit. D; Vit E.; Mg; flavonoids; curcuminoids; salicylates; TNF-α inhibitors |
Currently, six processes involved in T2D are identified, and for each of them a biomarker approach to quantify the process, and an intervention strategy to optimize/restore, is suggested.
Examples of diagnostic parameters relevant for type 2 diabetes in each of the four areas covered by 360° diagnosis.
| Bio | Psycho | Social | Spiritual |
|---|---|---|---|
| Metabolic status | Dietary preferences | Peer pressure | Eudaimonic well-being |
| Systems flexibility | Stress resilience | Food/sports availability | Life goals |
| Dietary intake | Personality type | Family habits | Worldview |
| Physical activity | Coping styles | Work environment | Religion |
| Genetics | Health literacy | Mindfullness | |
| Finances | Gratefullness |
The various phases in behavioral change, together with the individual’s perspective and coaching methods.
| Attaining habits | Individual | Coaching methods |
|---|---|---|
| Onboarding | Identification—who am I | Motivational interviewing and tailoring |
| Initial effort | I want this | Goal setting |
| Continue effort | I know my obstacles and I can overcome them | Problem identification and solving |
| Sustained effort | I enjoy the new behavior and its results | Self-monitoring, self-evaluation |
| Habit | It is part of who I am | ☺ |
Figure 2Schematic representation of a personal cure and maintenance trajectory. Depending on the personal 360° diagnosis, the duration and intensity of the cure and maintenance phases and the relative contribution of the components may vary.
Figure 3Schematic overview of a “life companion” approach. The citizen–patient interacts with a single ehealth (eHealth) platform (any combination of phone, desktop, life coach, healthcare provider) and receives interventions in all relevant areas (diet and lifestyle, behavior, information, etc.) at the right time in the right message format, based on both initial and continued diagnosis. The intervention is generated by “health services,” i.e., models that exploit personal health and behavior data. Timelines of diagnostic and intervention information are owned by the citizen/patient and may be shared within a community (health data cooperative), thus further strengthening the personal health data service with a “big data” component.
Type 2 diabetes is a systems disease where solutions need to be found in all three systems mentioned to achieve a transition from care to cure.
| Social system | Physiological system | Healthcare system |
|---|---|---|
| Obesogenic environment | Multiple interacting physiological processes | Conflicting stakeholder interests |
| Limited engagement with health status | No focus on prevention | |
| Social interactions are important for outcome | T2 diabetes initiates when one or more biological processes lose flexibility | Short-term financial vision |
| Optimal coaching, participation, and communication | Diagnosis of all relevant processes and predispositions | Patient empowerment |
| Integration of medical, social, economical, and mental solutions | Goal: regain flexibility in all relevant processes, exploiting diet, lifestyle, medication, and genetics where relevant | Implements regional setting |
| Acceptance by accreditation | ||