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Impact of Weight Change in Adults with Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus: A Literature Review and Critical Analysis

Authors Fridman M , Lucas ME, Paprocki Y, Dang-Tan T, Iyer NN 

Received 9 June 2020

Accepted for publication 9 September 2020

Published 29 September 2020 Volume 2020:12 Pages 555—566

DOI https://doi.org/10.2147/CEOR.S266873

Checked for plagiarism Yes

Review by Single anonymous peer review

Peer reviewer comments 2

Editor who approved publication: Professor Giorgio Colombo



Moshe Fridman,1 Mariann E Lucas,2 Yurek Paprocki,3 Tam Dang-Tan,4 Neeraj N Iyer5

1Biostatistics, AMF Consulting, Los Angeles, CA, USA; 2Information Science, Scientific Analytics, Novo Nordisk Inc, Plainsboro Township, NJ, USA; 3Medical Affairs, Novo Nordisk Inc, Plainsboro Township, NJ, USA; 4Medical Affairs, Novo Nordisk Inc, Plainsboro Township, NJ, USA; 5HEOR Strategy & Evidence Generation - Diabetes, Novo Nordisk Inc, Plainsboro Township, NJ, USA

Correspondence: Neeraj N Iyer
Novo Nordisk, Inc, 800 Scudders Mill Road, PlainsboroTownship, NJ 08536, USA
Tel +1 609 578 8157
Email [email protected]

Objective: Weight reduction is a key component of diabetes management in adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), yet the benefits of weight loss in T2DM patients have been difficult to quantify. We examined the medical literature regarding the relationships between weight change and 1) glycemic control and 2) cost and resource use.
Methods: Systematic searches were conducted in the electronic databases Embase, MEDLINE, and the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews to identify publications regarding the impact of weight change on T2DM outcomes from 2007 onward. Identified publications were screened for relevance against predefined eligibility criteria, and methodological approaches and results were extracted. Evidence for the impact of weight change on outcomes was evaluated and used to identify strengths, limitations, and gaps in the current literature.
Results: The number of studies meeting eligibility criteria for each outcome was: glycemic control (n=38) and cost and resource use (n=11). The relationship between weight change and glycemic control was dependent on the interplay of multiple factors, eg, the weight loss interventions employed, the antidiabetic medication classes used, the time horizon, and baseline BMI and glycemic control. With respect to cost and resource use, the review indicated that savings were associated with weight loss, and increased costs were associated with weight gain.
Conclusion: Studies regarding weight change in T2DM patients demonstrated varying effects on glycemic control and a positive association with costs and resource use, where weight loss was associated with decreased costs and resource use. Future studies may be able to clarify these relationships.

Keywords: type 2 diabetes, overweight/therapy, obesity/therapy, weight loss, cost, resource utilization, economics

Plain Language Summary

Weight reduction is a key component of diabetes management in patients with Type 2 diabetes mellitus. The evaluation of the benefits of weight loss interventions has been difficult, largely because of the many inter-relationships among these interventions, metabolic factors, and human behaviors.

We report on studies that examined the relationship of weight change and glycemic control (n=38) and cost and resource use (n=11). The relationship between weight change and glycemic control was not consistent and depended on other factors, such as the weight loss interventions employed, antidiabetic medication classes used, time period for weight change and outcome studied, and baseline Body Mass Index (BMI) and glycemic control. For cost and resource use, the review indicated that savings was associated with weight loss and increased costs associated with weight gain.

We highlight the potential to improve research study designs and methodologies to better understand the benefits of weight loss and the detriments of weight gain.

Introduction

According to the American Diabetes Association, an estimated 24.7 million people in the United States (US) are diagnosed with diabetes, representing approximately 9.7% of the adult population.1 Cases of diabetes are expected to continue to rise markedly, both in the US and worldwide.2,3 In 2017, the average medical expenditures in the US were 2.3 times higher in people with diabetes compared with those without diabetes, and there were an estimated 277,000 premature deaths attributed to diabetes.1 Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) accounts for 90–95% of all cases.4

Per the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 87.5% of US adults with diabetes were overweight or obese.4 The 2018 position statement of the American Diabetes Association (ADA) and the European Association for the Study of Diabetes (EASD) on the management of type 2 diabetes in adults states that “for those with obesity, efforts targeting weight loss, including lifestyle, medication, and surgical interventions, are recommended”5 Weight reduction improves insulin sensitivity and preserves beta-cell function, leading to decreased fasting and postprandial glucose levels, and improved glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) results.6 Balancing adequate glycemic control and obesity risk is a challenge for clinicians when choosing an antidiabetic medication regimen, since several antidiabetic medications are associated with weight gain.7,8

Multiple clinical studies have attempted to identify pharmaceutical, surgical, or lifestyle interventions that can achieve weight loss in the T2DM population.911 The pathophysiology of T2DM involves elaborate relationships between a variety of organ systems, each with their associated hormones and feedback loops. Adiposity increases insulin resistance, leading to the development of T2DM, or worsening symptoms.12 In turn, weight loss can result from a wide range of interventions (eg, diet, exercise, medications, surgery), with each intervention potentially having a different impact physiologically and psychologically.

The purpose of this review was to assess the recent medical literature regarding the effects of weight change in the T2DM population, with a focus on identifying the gaps and limitations within the current evidence. We used examples to determine how to better understand these limitations and overcome these constraints in the future.

Materials and Methods

A scoping literature review13 was conducted to identify studies of adult T2DM patients reporting relationships between weight loss and the outcomes of interest: 1) glycemic control, and 2) cost/resource use. Search queries were performed for literature published in the English language from January 1, 2007, through May 29, 2017, utilizing PubMed, EMBASE, and the Cochrane Database for Systematic Reviews. The Cochrane Database was searched separately. Search strings are provided in Supplementary Appendix 1.

Eligibility criteria were identified in advance (Table 1). Studies on cancer populations or patients who underwent bariatric surgery were excluded. These criteria were first applied to the title and abstract of an article in Round 1 of study selection. Citations were identified in Round 1 if they included adult individuals with T2DM and had data regarding weight change and the outcome of interest. Two reviewers read and selected all the citations. If the relevance of a citation was disputed, it was carried forward to Round 2. During Round 2, the full text of the potentially relevant citations was examined by 2 reviewers. Discrepancies were resolved by consensus, or if needed, discussion with the research team. Relevant data from eligible publications were entered into a data extraction table and verified by a second reviewer. For cost, all amounts extracted and reported are expressed in US dollars.

Table 1 Eligibility Criteria for the Review

Results

Study Selection

The PRISMA diagrams of the flow of citations through the selection process for the two outcomes are presented in Figures 1 and 2.14 There were 786 glycemic control citations and 419 cost/resource use citations identified from the PubMed and Embase electronic databases. Of 318 articles retrieved from the Cochrane Database that pertained to diabetes, none was included in either of the final datasets. In general, these studies did not meet inclusion criteria because they did not evaluate weight change. The final datasets included 38 articles for glycemic control1552 and 11 articles for cost/resource use.5060 Three articles were included in both datasets.5052

Figure 1 Flowchart of the process of determining eligible studies regarding T2DM weight loss and glycemic control.

Figure 2 Flowchart of the process of determining eligible studies regarding T2DM weight loss and cost/resource use.

Studies on the Association Between Weight Loss and Glycemic Control

Thirty-eight relevant published articles were identified (Table 2). These studies were of the following types: 16 post hoc analyses of randomized controlled trials (RCT); 13 retrospective observational cohort studies; 5 prospective cohort studies, 4 of which included an intervention, ie, pharmaceutical (n=3) or lifestyle (n=1); 1 post hoc analysis of an observational cohort study; 1 study that created a model to describe the relationship between changes in weight and glycemic control; 1 RCT; and 1 discrete choice experiment.

Table 2 Summary of Selected Articles with Reference Numbers

A range of measures for weight change was found. Changes in weight were described in kilograms (kg), body mass index (BMI), percent body fat, and by percent changes in these measurements. These measures were often collapsed into categorical variables such as weight loss/weight gain/weight stability, weight change patterns (ie, weight fluctuations over time), tertiles/quartiles of weight change, or were classified using a minimal loss/gain of a specific amount of weight, eg, ≥3% change, ≥5 kg, or BMI ≥ 1 kg/m2. The composite outcome of weight gain or loss and a specified HbA1c goal was also used. Time periods for weight measurements varied across studies, some focusing on short term (eg, 12 weeks), and others on sustained weight loss (eg, 2 years).

The most common measure of glycemic control was HbA1c, which was expressed in both percent of total hemoglobin and in mmol/L. Various HbA1c goals were used as study endpoints. Other measures included fasting glucose levels, and one paper used the frequency of hypoglycemic episodes.24 For several studies, glycemic control was treated as an explanatory variable for weight change, as opposed to an outcome.15,27,31,35,39,44

The reported relationships between weight change and glycemic control were not consistent across the 38 studies. The wide variation in findings was due to the heterogeneity in (1) the factors described above, (2) the type of interventions and medication classes used by the patients in different studies, and (3) the period of observation. Some studies demonstrated a positive relationship, eg, that weight loss was associated with a lower HbA1c, some demonstrating a negative relationship, eg, that weight loss was associated with a higher HbA1c, and some demonstrating that this relationship may be positive or negative depending on the time period studied and the intervention used.

Studies Showing a Positive Association

Real-world studies that reported a positive relationship included Davis et al,51 who found that ≥5% loss over 4 years was associated with measurably improved glycemic control at 4 years. Another real-world study was conducted by McAdam-Marx et al.16,17,40 The authors found that, among patients who were newly treated or starting a new class of medications, those who lost ≥3% of their body weight were more likely to attain their HbA1c goal. In a post hoc analysis of an RCT, Wing et al45 had similar results.

In a meta-analysis, Franz et al48 found that 5% weight loss appeared necessary to have beneficial effects on glycemic control, while acknowledging that most lifestyle interventions were not able to achieve this amount of weight loss. Carter et al,21 in a study comparing two types of energy-restriction diets, found that a 1% change in body fat accounted for a 3% change in HbA1c. Gummeson et al49 conducted a meta-analysis to develop a model suggesting that, on average, for each kg of weight loss, there was an HbA1c reduction of 0.1 points, and that HbA1c lowering was greater when baseline glycemic control was poor.

Studies Showing a Negative Association

Other studies demonstrated and quantified a negative relationship, ie, that weight gain was associated with a lower HbA1c in patients. This is consistent with the often-cited association between weight gain and insulin use,8 although it was not always possible to distinguish the results by drug classes for the studies included in this report. The study by Cohen et al23 was among the real-world studies demonstrating this result. The investigators followed outpatients for over 5 years, dividing them into those on oral medications vs oral medications plus insulin, noting that the insulin group increased weight upon insulin initiation with a reduction in HbA1c. Watson et al44 also examined weight gain at insulin initiation, finding weight gain highest in those with poorest control and that higher BMI at baseline was associated with less weight gained. Janghorbani et al38 followed outpatients for up to 15 years, also demonstrating that those who gained weight had better glycemic control, although there was no description of or adjustment for medication class.

Several post hoc analyses of RCTs also demonstrated this negative relationship, that weight gain was associated with a lower HbA1c. Glass et al,32 in a study comparing exenatide and insulin, found that patients on exenatide achieved an average 2 kg weight loss and a 1% decrease in HbA1c, while patients on insulin had a 2 kg weight gain and a 1% decrease in HbA1c. Jacob et al37 pooled data from studies using insulin and also found weight gain to be associated with a drop in HbA1c.

Patterns of Weight Loss and Glycemic Control

Several real-world studies attempted to describe weight change patterns over time. These studies generally found that the relationship between weight change and glycemic control was not only associated with diabetes medication classes but was also dynamic throughout a patient’s life course. Study results were dependent on the window of the study period. Jansen et al39 followed patients starting biphasic insulin for 3 years, noting that in the first 9 months, patients gained on average 0.5 kg/month. They found that 12% of the variation in documented weight gain was associated with a drop in HbA1c, and that those with higher baseline obesity had less weight gain. However, in the following period (9–36 months), bodyweight increased at 0.1 kg/month, unrelated to changes in glycemic control. In patients followed for 2 years after diagnosis, Aucott et al18 described two weight change patterns that were associated with poor glycemic control in patients in a large diabetes registry: 1) gaining weight, and 2) being weight stable with weight change variability. Feldstein et al,29 in a retrospective cohort study of patients with newly diagnosed T2DM, stressed the importance of initial weight loss, finding that those who lost weight in the first 18 months had improved glycemic control despite regaining weight in the next 18 months.

With respect to post hoc analyses of weight change patterns, similar points were made. First, weight change patterns appeared to parallel what was found in the real-world studies. Neiberg et al,41 in a post hoc analysis of an RCT using data from the Look AHEAD lifestyle intervention study, showed that greater first year month-to-month weight losses (top tertile) were predictive of greater HbA1c reduction at 4 years. Second, the initiation phase of insulin treatment was associated with weight gain and improved glycemic control. Fonseca et al,31 in another post hoc analysis of an RCT, found this weight gain in the insulin initiation phase especially true if the baseline HbA1c was elevated. Huizenga et al,35 in a prospective observational ancillary study to an RCT, specifically studied the trajectories of patients who underwent intensive control with insulin vs non-insulin treatments after control was achieved, ie, essentially avoiding contamination by the initiation of insulin. They found that at the end of the 2-year study, insulin users had less weight gain compared to non-insulin users.

Studies on the Association Between Weight Loss and Healthcare Cost and Resource Use

The literature search resulted in 11 relevant published articles, of which 6 were retrospective observational, 1 was a prospective observational cohort study, 3 were based on simulation models, and 1 was a discrete choice experiment (Table 2). Five of the retrospective studies used claims and/or EMR administrative data and one used epidemiological data collected at primary care centers. The prospective study used data collected from an observational diabetes study.

As found with research that reported on glycemic control and weight loss summarized in the previous section, a review of the healthcare cost and resource use papers identified a range of measures for both weight change and cost. For most studies, healthcare costs included outpatient and inpatient medical costs, labs costs and pharmacy costs (both all-cause and diabetes-related); however, Sabale et al60 excluded medication costs. The period of measurement of costs also varied by study, with most studies considering the annual costs for the year after the weight change evaluation period, effectively assuming a future effect of weight change on cost. Sabale et al60 also considered a longer 3-year cost follow-up but used overlapping annual periods for weight change and cost measurements. The 3 simulation studies examined lifetime costs.

We found that patients who gained weight generally had higher costs compared to those in weight-loss or weight-neutral cohorts. Five studies49,5254 used administrative data (eg, insurance and pharmacy claims data), that may have included a link to electronic medical record (EMR) data, to assess the relationship between weight change and costs. Bell et al54 performed a retrospective cohort study in patients in a health maintenance organization (HMO) who were receiving at least one oral antidiabetic medication (91% on metformin only during the study period) to measure all costs and diabetes-specific costs for T2DM patients losing >3% or gaining >3% compared to weight-neutral patients in the first 6 months of the study. The weight-loss cohort incurred lower costs per year, primarily due to lower medical costs from reduced utilization. Weight reduction was associated with approximately $2200 and $440 lower annual all-cause and T2DM-specific costs (p < 0.05), respectively. Weight gain was associated with a significant increase in all-cause costs of $3400 per year. Differences in T2DM-specific costs between the weight-gain and the weight-neutral cohort did not reach significance levels.

Blak et al55 had similar results using administrative databases in the United Kingdom. Compared with the weight-neutral group (ie, <3% weight change), weight gain over 6 months was subsequently associated with increased diabetes medication prescribing and contact with primary care clinicians, and with increased diabetes costs in primary care and in total spending. However, weight gain was not associated with more or longer all-cause hospital admissions. By contrast, higher weight loss was associated with substantially increased odds of all-cause hospital admission, length of stay and total costs but not with diabetes primary care spending. These higher costs associated with weight loss differ from the findings of Bell et al,54 who found inpatient costs lowered. The inclusion of older, more severe T2DM patients in Blak et al55 would increase the likelihood that some of these patients were fragile and suffered severe complications requiring hospitalization following intentional or unintentional weight loss during the identification period.

To avoid the potential bias caused by unintentional weight loss, Nichols et al,50 in another administrative data study, focused on weight stability, and eliminated those ≥85 years old. Patients who maintained weight within 5% of baseline over the 4-year study period experienced a reduction in costs of about $400 regardless of HbA1c. In contrast, patients who gained >5% of baseline weight and had mean HbA1c ≥7% had an increase in costs of $1473 (p < 0.001). Those who gained >5% of their baseline weight with mean HbA1c <7% had a modest increase in costs ($387, non-significant).

Mukerjee et al53 conducted an administrative data study among patients with T2DM and found that weight loss over a short-term (6-month) period was associated with decreased diabetes-specific pharmacy costs over the subsequent 12 months. In the subset of patients who had obesity and had no previous cardiovascular disease, weight loss was also associated with decreased all-cause pharmacy costs, diabetes-specific medical costs, and diabetes-specific total healthcare costs.

Yu et al56 examined a linked HMO database of administrative data and EMR data in a retrospective cohort study to compare both 1-year total and diabetes-specific healthcare costs in patients who did and did not have weight gain over a 6-month period. This work was consistent with most of the above findings in that weight change was positively associated with total costs, but added the finding that, for DM-specific costs, it was important to model weight gain and weight loss separately. They found that every one percentage point weight loss was associated with a 5.8% or $131 cost decrease (p < 0.01), while one percentage point weight gain was insignificantly related to a 0.40% or $9 cost increase.

With respect to other research designs, Davis et al,51 in a prospective observational cohort study, found lower total medication costs for those with a 5% loss of initial body weight over 4 years. They demonstrated that weight loss during follow-up was associated with cerebrovascular disease at baseline, highlighting the above concern regarding the identification of intentional vs unintentional weight loss.

Sabale et al,60 in a retrospective analysis of an epidemiological dataset, identified newly diagnosed patients in primary care clinics and followed them annually with BMI measurement. Outpatient, inpatient, and laboratory costs over 3 years were documented. Patients were assigned to weight change categories based on ≥1 BMI unit increase, <1 BMI unit change, and ≥1 BMI unit decrease (roughly equivalent to a 3% change in body weight). Patients were assigned a pattern for the entire 3 years. Mean annual and 3-year cumulative healthcare costs were estimated for each pattern. Weight stability was the most common pattern over 3 years and it was associated with the lowest healthcare costs.

Meads et al,57 Thorpe et al,58 and Trueman et al59 each used simulation models to examine short-term and lifetime costs for weight change. None of these studies exclusively studied T2DM patients. Two of these studies57,59 used data from weight loss intervention programs and found cost savings associated with enrollment in the program. The third,58 using data from the Diabetes Prevention Program to populate their models, found cost savings associated with weight loss. This last study assumed that weight loss was permanent, and also checked a scenario where weight loss was temporary for 90% of the individuals, still finding that cost savings would occur.

Discussion

This review identified 38 studies describing the association of weight change with the outcome of glycemic control and 11 describing the association of weight change with healthcare cost/resource use. Although studies regarding the relationship between weight change and glycemic control showed a range of associations, the relationship between weight loss and cost/resource use was generally positive, with weight gain associated with higher costs and weight loss associated with lower costs.

The implications must be examined within each individual study context and may not be generalizable. For example, among the studies that focused on the impact of weight loss on glycemic control, a variety of weight loss patterns were described, illustrating that simple linear relationships did not consistently reflect what actually occurred. Several factors may have impacted the interpretation of the results, including not only the duration of T2DM diagnosis [which has been found to be unreliable as a proxy for T2DM severity],61 the baseline BMI and HbA1c, and the treatments used, but also the time period evaluated. Generally, the weight loss period evaluated was concurrent with the change in glycemic control, ie, the entire time period was used to evaluate both the predictor and outcome variables. Demonstration of a causal effect between weight change and the outcome would require that the weight change preceded the outcome. Feldstein et al,29 Jansen et al,39 and Neiberg et al41 each demonstrated the importance of calculating weight change over an “initial” period, preceding the time of measuring the change in glycemic control, not only because time of measurement may impact the associations but also because of changes in both weight and glycemic control that may occur after 9–18 months of treatment if a change in treatment is involved.

Although most studies attempted to control for the medication class used by patients, there was much potential for misclassification, particularly in real-world studies over the long term. These concerns are warranted, given the known and often opposite effects of insulin and other medication classes on the relationship between weight loss and glycemic control.

The cost review demonstrated a generally positive relationship between weight change and costs. This result was consistent with evidence that weight gain is linked to increased insulin resistance and consequent initiation of insulin treatment,10 therefore requiring more healthcare services. Weight gain is also linked to worsening of cardiovascular risk factors such as blood pressure and elevated cholesterol,62 requiring closer patient monitoring and additional medications. Several of the administrative data studies suggested that weight loss may not have positive associations with costs in older patients50,54,55 or those with cardiovascular disease.53 The concept of intentional versus unintentional weight loss is not easily distinguished in such studies, and sub-analyses may be necessary to quantify the bias encountered because of weight loss due to hospitalization and illness.

The reviewed studies indicate that weight gain, weight loss, and weight stability may all have different effects on healthcare spending, and that perhaps longer-term follow-up is required to collect more accurate information regarding weight change patterns. The importance of considering weight change patterns is supported by a recent study that examined real-world weight change patterns in a large longitudinal electronic patient database and included patients who had obesity at baseline (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2), did not gain weight during the first 6 months weight change evaluation period and had a minimum of 2.5 years of follow up.63 It was found that weight cycling and regain were common after an initial weight loss and that continued weight loss was more likely among patients who initially lost more weight. Longitudinal data may provide stronger long-term evidence and help in overcoming these limitations with more robust study designs that include adjustment for baseline patient characteristics and better account for variation in weight change and clinical outcomes over time.

A salient limitation of both the administrative data studies and simulation models was their generalizability to the complex care scenarios that patients with T2DM experience. In general, these studies used a government or payer perspective, failing to consider the potential benefits that might accrue to patients, such as improved quality of life, or fewer disability days, or improved glycemic control.

An important finding of this review was that the study designs evaluating the relationship between glycemia and weight change need further development. The 2018 position statement of the ADA and the EASD acknowledges the key knowledge gap regarding

understanding the biology, psychology, and sociology of obesity to identify pharmacological, behavioral, and political approaches to preventing and treating this principal cause of type 2 diabetes.5

Since RCT are designed to determine the effect of the intervention (often a drug) on outcomes, these studies are difficult to use for the independent assessment of the impact of weight change on diabetes outcomes, such as HbA1c. The creation of a cohort of T2DM patients (such as large longitudinal patient systems) that have real-world weight loss and glycemic control measurements unassociated with a specific intervention assignment would improve the interpretability, quantification, and generalizability of the connection between weight loss and outcomes in T2DM patients.64 Figure 3 summarizes the potential relationships derived from this literature review. The key methodological barriers identified in the literature were:

Figure 3 Nature of relationships between weight loss and health outcomes.

Study design issues –

  1. Most studies examined an intervention and examine the effects of weight changes on outcomes. However, the potential bias from the confounding between the intervention and weight change may not have been entirely removed, even after adjustment for the intervention.
  2. Effect modification by baseline patient characteristics was not always accounted for.
  3. Most studies modeling outcomes considered static values for weight change and for confounders such as glycemic control. Methods for time varying covariates for longitudinal data would be more appropriate to accurately model the dynamic nature of these relationships.
  4. The relationships between outcomes and weight change likely depend on the timing of measurement relative to the duration of the disease and type and duration of treatment at time of measurement. The choice of index date for pre/post studies varied and may be critical to the effects found and their interpretation.

Weight change measurement issues –

  1. There was wide variation in the way weight change was measured, and the functional form (eg, linearity) of the relationship may depend on the definition used.
  2. Various studies relied on self-reported or perception of weight change and others on clinical records. The reporting source may affect the nature of the relationship of weight change and outcomes.

Outcome measurement issues –

  1. There was wide variation in the way glycemic control and cost were measured, and the functional form (eg, linearity) of the relationship may depend on the definition used.
  2. The period of evaluation of outcomes varied (eg, 12 months or 24 months). There may be different effects of weight change on short vs long-term outcomes.

Limitations

This review was conducted using predefined eligibility criteria and conformed to Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines, which contributes to the strength of the conclusions. However, limitations to this methodology include 1) restriction to articles published in the study period, and 2) the potential not to include articles that were lacking in the keywords used in the search but that did address the relationships of interest. Other limitations with respect to generalizability of the data retrieved may have resulted from the various populations studied by the relevant articles (eg, claims databases, national polls), and the methodological limitations outlined above. None of the studies directly evaluated beta-cell function and weight loss, a result that may have occurred because of the parameters used in our literature search. However, weight loss is known to directly impact insulin sensitivity, and to preserve beta-cell function. Where this review demonstrated inconsistent relationships between weight loss and glycemic control, relationships between weight loss and insulin sensitivity or beta-cell function may be more robust. Weight loss is generally associated with an improvement in whole-body insulin sensitivity and beta-cell function.65,66

Conclusion

This literature review and critical analysis describe the current state of the medical literature with respect to the association between weight change and the outcomes of glycemic control and cost/resource use in patients with T2DM. Generally, the studies were consistent in that weight loss/stability appeared positively associated with cost savings and that weight gain was negatively associated with cost savings. Improved study designs are required to isolate the effects of weight change on glycemic control and on cost/resource use, particularly with respect to potential biases that may occur because of differences in baseline characteristics of study patients, weight loss interventions, and the measurement of changes in these parameters and their relationships over time. Future conduct of real-world studies may advance our understanding of the incremental benefits of weight loss in T2DM patients.

Acknowledgments

The authors acknowledge Dr. Lisa M. Korst, AMF Consulting, who was funded by Novo Nordisk, Inc. for manuscript preparation and editorial assistance.

Author Contributions

All authors made a significant contribution to the work reported, whether that is in the conception, study design, execution, acquisition of data, analysis and interpretation, or in all these areas; took part in drafting, revising or critically reviewing the article; gave final approval of the version to be published; have agreed on the journal to which the article has been submitted; and agree to be accountable for all aspects of the work.

Funding

Funding for this study was provided by Novo Nordisk, Inc, USA.

Disclosure

Dr. Fridman is an employee of AMF Consulting, USA, and was contracted by Novo Nordisk, Inc. Dr Fridman reports personal fees from NovoNordisk, during the conduct of the study; personal fees from GSK, Jazz Pharmaceuticals, Shire, CSL Behring, Arena Pharmaceuticals, and Sage Therapeutics, outside the submitted work. Ms. Lucas and Drs. Paprocki, Dang-Tan, and Iyer are employees of Novo Nordisk, Inc. Dr Paprocki is a stockholder of Novo Nordisk, Inc. Although employees of Novo Nordisk were involved in the design, collection, analysis, interpretation, and fact checking of information, the content of this manuscript, the interpretation of the data, and the decision to submit the manuscript for publication was made by the authors independently. The authors report no other conflicts of interest in this work.

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