Standards of Care in Diabetes - 2023
Standards of Care in Diabetes - 2023
Standards of Care in Diabetes - 2023
Obesity is a chronic and often progressive disease with numerous medical, physical,
and psychosocial complications, including a substantially increased risk for type 2
diabetes (1). There is strong and consistent evidence that obesity management can
delay the progression from prediabetes to type 2 diabetes (2–6) and is highly bene-
ficial in treating type 2 diabetes (7–18). In people with type 2 diabetes and over-
weight or obesity, modest weight loss improves glycemia and reduces the need for
glucose-lowering medications (7–9), and larger weight loss substantially reduces A1C
and fasting glucose and has been shown to promote sustained diabetes remission
through at least 2 years (11,19–23). Several modalities, including intensive behavioral
counseling, obesity pharmacotherapy, and bariatric surgery, may aid in achieving and Disclosure information for each author is
maintaining meaningful weight loss and reducing obesity-associated health risks. available at https://doi.org/10.2337/dc23-SDIS.
Metabolic surgery strongly improves glycemia and often leads to remission of diabe- Suggested citation: ElSayed NA, Aleppo G, Aroda
VR, et al., American Diabetes Association. 8.
tes, improved quality of life, improved cardiovascular outcomes, and reduced mortal- Obesity and weight management for the pre-
ity. The importance of addressing obesity is further heightened by numerous studies vention and treatment of type 2 diabetes:
showing that both obesity and diabetes increase the risk for more severe coronavirus Standards of Care in Diabetes—2023. Diabetes
disease 2019 (COVID-19) infections (24–27). This section aims to provide evidence- Care 2023;46(Suppl. 1):S128–S139
based recommendations for obesity management, including behavioral, pharmaco- © 2022 by the American Diabetes Association.
logic, and surgical interventions, in people with type 2 diabetes and in those at risk. Readers may use this article as long as the
work is properly cited, the use is educational
This section focuses on obesity management in adults; further discussion on obesity
and not for profit, and the work is not altered.
in older individuals and children can be found in Section 13, “Older Adults,” and Sec- More information is available at https://www.
tion 14, “Children and Adolescents,” respectively. diabetesjournals.org/journals/pages/license.
diabetesjournals.org/care Obesity and Weight Management for Type 2 Diabetes S129
ASSESSMENT Height and weight should be measured counseling, pharmacologic therapy, medical
to calculate BMI annually or more fre- devices, and metabolic surgery (Table 8.1).
Recommendations
quently when appropriate (20). BMI, calcu- The latter three strategies may be consid-
8.1 Use person-centered, nonjudg- ered for carefully selected individuals as
lated as weight in kilograms divided by the
mental language that fosters
square of height in meters (kg/m2), is calcu- adjuncts to nutrition changes, physical ac-
collaboration between individ- lated automatically by most electronic med- tivity, and behavioral counseling.
uals and health care professio- ical records. Use BMI to document weight Among people with type 2 diabetes
nals, including person-first lan- status (overweight: BMI 25–29.9 kg/m2; and overweight or obesity who have in-
guage (e.g., “person with obesity” obesity class I: BMI 30–34.9 kg/m2; obesity adequate glycemic, blood pressure, and
rather than “obese person”). E class II: BMI 35–39.9 kg/m2; obesity class lipid control and/or other obesity-related
8.2 Measure height and weight III: BMI $40 kg/m2) but note that misclassi- medical conditions, modest and sustained
*Recommended cut points for Asian American individuals (expert opinion). †Treatment may be indicated for select motivated individuals.
by trained interventionists in either indi- little or no weight loss benefits. In contrast, discontinuation of the medi-
vidual or group sessions (51). Assessing vitamin/mineral (e.g., iron, vitamin B12, vi- cation and evaluate alterna-
an individual’s motivation level, life cir- tamin D) supplementation may be indicated tive medications or treatment
cumstances, and willingness to implement in cases of documented deficiency, and pro- approaches. A
behavioral changes to achieve weight loss tein supplements may be indicated as ad-
should be considered along with medical juncts to medically supervised weight loss
status when weight loss interventions are therapies. Glucose-Lowering Therapy
recommended and initiated (37,56). Health disparities adversely affect peo- A meta-analysis of 227 randomized con-
People with type 2 diabetes and over- ple who have systematically experienced trolled trials of glucose-lowering treat-
weight or obesity who have lost weight greater obstacles to health based on their ments in type 2 diabetes found that A1C
should be offered long-term ($1 year) race or ethnicity, socioeconomic status,
FDA-approved obesity medications have continue the medication. When early use with BMI 30.0–34.9 kg/m2
been shown to improve glycemia in peo- appears ineffective (typically <5% weight (27.5–32.4 kg/m 2 in Asian
ple with type 2 diabetes and delay pro- loss after 3 months’ use), it is unlikely that American individuals) who do
gression to type 2 diabetes in at-risk continued use will improve weight out- not achieve durable weight loss
individuals (23). Phentermine and other comes; as such, it should be recom-
and improvement in comorbid-
older adrenergic agents are indicated for mended to discontinue the medication
ities (including hyperglycemia)
short-term (#12 weeks) treatment (68). and consider other treatment options.
with nonsurgical methods. A
Five medications are FDA approved for
8.20 Metabolic surgery should
long-term use (>12 weeks) in adults with MEDICAL DEVICES FOR WEIGHT LOSS
BMI $27 kg/m2 with one or more obe- be performed in high-volume
While gastric banding devices have fallen centers with multidisciplinary
sity-associated comorbid conditions (e.g.,
Table 8.2—Continued
1-Year (52- or 56-week)
mean weight loss (% loss from baseline)
National Average
Typical adult Average wholesale Drug Acquisition Weight loss
maintenance price (30-day Cost (30-day (% loss from Common side effects Possible safety concerns/
Medication name dose supply) (128) supply) (129) Treatment arms baseline) (130–134) considerations (130–134)
Glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist
Liraglutide (17)** 3 mg q.d. $1,619 $1,295 3.0 mg q.d. 6.0 Gastrointestinal side effects Pancreatitis has been reported in
1.8 mg q.d. 4.7 (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, clinical trials, but causality has not
PBO 2.0 esophageal reflux), injection been established. Discontinue if
site reactions, elevated heart pancreatitis is suspected.
rate, hypoglycemia Use caution in people with kidney
Obesity and Weight Management for Type 2 Diabetes
Postbariatric hypoglycemia (PBH) can mental health conditions until these condi- phentermine and topiramate extended release.
Diabetes Care 2014;37:3309–3316
occur with RYGB, VSG, and other gastro- tions have been sufficiently addressed. In-
15. O’Neil PM, Smith SR, Weissman NJ, et al.
intestinal procedures and may severely dividuals with preoperative or new-onset Randomized placebo-controlled clinical trial of
impact quality of life (116–118). PBH is psychopathology should be assessed regu- lorcaserin for weight loss in type 2 diabetes
driven in part by altered gastric empty- larly following surgery to optimize mental mellitus: the BLOOM-DM study. Obesity (Silver
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