Remission of type 2 diabetes: position statement of the Italian society of diabetes (SID).

Acta Diabetol

Department of Systems Medicine, Unit of Internal Medicine - Obesity Center, Policlinico Tor Vergata, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The pandemic of type 2 diabetes (T2D) is mainly caused by excess body fat from long-term energy imbalance, highlighting the importance of weight loss in preventing and treating the condition.
  • Weight regain is common after weight loss and often leads to the return or worsening of T2D, reflecting the biological challenges in maintaining weight loss.
  • Recent studies indicate that bariatric surgery is more effective than traditional treatments for weight loss and T2D remission, while new antihyperglycemic medications also show promise by enhancing fat tissue function, shifting the understanding of how obesity and T2D are interconnected.

Article Abstract

The primary cause of the pandemic scale of type 2 diabetes (T2D) is the excessive and/or abnormal accumulation of adiposity resulting from a chronic positive energy balance. Any form of weight loss dramatically affects the natural history of T2D, favoring prevention, treatment, and even remission in the case of significant weight loss. However, weight regain, which is often accompanied by the recurrence or worsening of obesity complications such as T2D, is an inevitable biological phenomenon that is an integral part of the pathophysiology of obesity. This can occur not only after weight loss, but also during obesity treatment if it is not effective enough to counteract the physiological responses aimed at restoring adiposity to its pre-weight-loss equilibrium state. Over the past few years, many controlled and randomized studies have suggested a superior efficacy of bariatric surgery compared to conventional therapy in terms of weight loss, glycemic control, and rates of T2D remission. Recently, the therapeutic armamentarium in the field of diabetology has been enriched with new antihyperglycemic drugs with considerable efficacy in reducing body weight, which could play a pathogenetic role in the remission of T2D, not through the classical incretin effect, but by improving adipose tissue functions. All these concepts are discussed in this position statement, which aims to deepen the pathogenetic links between obesity and T2D, shift the paradigm from a "simple" interaction between insulin resistance and insulin deficiency, and evaluate the efficacy of different therapeutic interventions to improve T2D management and induce diabetes remission whenever still possible.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11486812PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00592-024-02317-xDOI Listing

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