The Journal of nutrition | 2021

Stimulated Insulin Secretion Predicts Changes in Body Composition Following Weight Loss in Adults with High BMI.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


BACKGROUND\nThe aim of obesity treatment is to promote loss of fat relative to lean mass. However, body composition changes with calorie restriction differ among individuals.\n\n\nOBJECTIVES\nThe goal of this study was to test the hypothesis that insulin secretion predicts body composition changes among young and middle-age adults with high BMI (in kg/m2) following major weight loss.\n\n\nMETHODS\nExploratory analyses were conducted with pre-randomization data from 2 large feeding trials: the Framingham, Boston, Bloomington, Birmingham, and Baylor study (FB4; n\xa0=\xa082, 43.9% women, BMI ≥27) and the Framingham State Food Study [(FS)2; n\xa0=\xa0161, 69.6% women, BMI ≥25]. Participants in the 2 trials consumed calorie-restricted moderate-carbohydrate or very-low-carbohydrate diets to produce 12-18% weight loss in ∼14 wk or 10-14% in ∼10 wk, respectively. We determined insulin concentration 30 min after a 75-g oral glucose load (insulin-30) as a measure of insulin secretion and HOMA-IR as a measure of insulin resistance at baseline. Body composition was determined by DXA at baseline and post-weight loss. Associations were analyzed using general linear models with adjustment for covariates.\n\n\nRESULTS\nIn FB4, higher insulin-30 was associated with a smaller decrease in fat mass (0.441\xa0kg per 100 μIU/mL increment in baseline insulin-30; P\xa0=\xa00.005; -1.20-kg mean difference between the first compared with the fifth group of insulin-30) and a larger decrease in lean mass (-0.465\xa0kg per 100 μIU/mL; P\xa0=\xa00.004; 1.27-kg difference). Participants with higher insulin-30 lost a smaller proportion of weight loss as fat (-3.37% per 100 μIU/mL; P\xa0=\xa00.003; 9.20% difference). Greater HOMA-IR was also significantly associated with adverse body composition changes. Results from (FS)2 were qualitatively similar but of a smaller magnitude.\n\n\nCONCLUSIONS\nBaseline insulin dynamics predict substantial individual differences in body composition following weight loss. These findings may inform understanding of the pathophysiological basis for weight regain and the design of more effective obesity treatment. Registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT03394664 and NCT02068885.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1093/jn/nxab315
Language English
Journal The Journal of nutrition

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