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Todd Datz
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Boston, MA (Feb 25, 2009) -- Many popular diets emphasize either carbohydrate,
protein or fat as the best way to lose weight. However, there have been
few studies lasting more than a year that evaluate the effect on weight
loss of diets with different compositions of those nutrients. In a
randomized clinical trial led by researchers at the Harvard School of
Public Health (HSPH) and Pennington Biomedical Research Center of the
Louisiana State University System, a comparison of overweight
participants assigned to four different diets over a two-year period
showed that reducing calories achieved weight loss regardless of which
of the three nutrients was emphasized. The study, which was funded by
the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI) of the National
Institutes of Health, appears in the February 26, 2009 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine.
"This
is important information for physicians, dieticians and adults, who
should focus weight loss approaches on reducing calorie intake," said
Frank Sacks, professor of cardiovascular disease prevention at HSPH and
lead author of the study.
The NEJM issue includes an accompanying editorial on the study's findings.
The
trial included 811 men and women who were randomly divided into four
diet groups with different target nutrient compositions:
- Low-fat, average protein: 20% of calories from fat, 15% of calories from protein, 65% of calories from carbohydrate
- Low-fat, high-protein: 20% fat, 25% protein, 55% carbohydrate
- High-fat, average protein: 40% fat, 15% protein, 45% carbohydrate
- High-fat, high-protein: 40% fat, 25% protein, 35% carbohydrate
The
participants were diverse in age, sex (62% women, 38% men), geography
and income. The diets followed heart-healthy principles, replacing
saturated with unsaturated fat and were high in whole cereal grains,
fruits and vegetables. Each participant received a diet prescription
that encouraged a 750-calorie reduction per day, however none were less
than 1,200 total calories per day. Participants were asked to do 90
minutes of moderate exercise each week. They recorded their daily food
and drink intake in a food diary and in a web-based program that
provided information on how closely they were meeting their dieting
goals. Individual counseling was provided every eight weeks over two
years and group sessions were held three out of four weeks during the
first six months and two out of four weeks from six months to two years.
The
results showed that, regardless of diet, weight loss and reduction in
waist circumference were similar. Participants lost an average of 13
pounds at six months and maintained a 9-pound loss at two years. Weight
loss primarily took place in the first 6 months; after 12 months, all
groups began to slowly regain weight, a finding consistent with other
diet studies. However, the extent of weight regain was much less, about
20%, of the average regain in previous studies. Waistlines were reduced
by an average of two inches at the end of the two-year period.
Most
risk factors for cardiovascular disease improved for dieters at six
months and two years. HDL ("good") cholesterol increased and LDL
("bad") cholesterol, triglycerides, blood pressure and insulin
decreased. The metabolic syndrome, a group of coronary heart disease
risk factors including high blood pressure, insulin resistance and
abdominal obesity, also decreased.
The main finding from the
trial was that diets with varying emphases on carbohydrate, fat and
protein levels all achieved clinically meaningful weight loss and
maintenance of weight loss over a two-year period. "These results show
that, as long as people follow a heart-healthy, reduced-calorie diet,
there is more than one nutritional approach to achieving and
maintaining a healthy weight," said Elizabeth G. Nabel, M.D., Director,
NHLBI.
Another important finding was that participants who
regularly attended counseling sessions lost more weight than those who
didn't. Dieters who attended two thirds of sessions over two years lost
about 22 pounds of weight as compared to the average weight loss of 9
pounds. "These findings suggest that continued contact with
participants to help them achieve their goals may be more important
than the macronutrient composition of their diets," said Sacks.
Source: Harvard School of Public Health
Original article: Frank M. Sacks, George A.
Bray, Vincent J. Carey, Steven R. Smith, Donna H. Ryan, Stephen D.
Anton, Katherine McManus, Catherine M. Champagne, Louise M. Bishop,
Nancy Laranjo, Meryl S. Leboff, Jennifer C. Rood, Lilian de Jonge,
Catherine M. Loria, Evan Obarzanek, Donald A. Williamson (2009). Randomized Trial Comparing Fat, Protein, and Carbohydrate Composition
of Diets for Weight Loss for Two Years. New England Journal of Medicine, 360(9): 859-873, Feb 26, 2009.
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