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KFO 114:  TULIP: Tuebingen Lifestyle Intervention Programme Prevention of type 2 diabetes mellitus and its vascular complications - identification of predictive metabolic and genotypic parameters for the responsiveness to and necessity for lifestyle intervention

Subject Area Medicine
Biology
Term from 2003 to 2009
Project identifier Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 5396893
 
The medical and socioeconomic importance of primary prevention of type 2 diabetes mellitus is unquestionable. Approximately one third of the German population is predisposed to this disease. Practical implementation of prevention programmes within available resources therefore requires validated predictors for both disease risk and responsiveness to preventive measures. In the Tübingen family study, first degree relatives of patients with type 2 diabetes were characterized for prediabetic subphenotypes. Based on a database of over 1000 phenotypically and genotypically characterized subjects we start a longitudinal study in 400 non-diabetic (NGT or IGT), overweight volunteers (recruitment over 3 years) who undergo a structured lifestyle modification (low calory diet plus exercise).
In retrospective analyses metabolic (insulin secretion and sensitivity, respiratory quotient, fatty acid pattern, adipocytokine concentrations) and genotypic markers (candidate gene variants) at baseline shall be identified that predict the necessity for and responsiveness to prevention (change in body weight and glucose tolerance as surrogate endpoint). With refined subprotocols (insulin sensitivity of the central nervous system, intramyocellular lipids, short-term lipid infusion, insulin secretion and sensitivity at follow up) that can be carried out as add-ons to the main longitudinal protocol, insight into mechanisms of disease development and prevention can be obtained. Results from these add-on protocols in turn may contribute to develop novel concepts (e.g. candidate genes) that can be validated using the main protocol cohort. By coupling laborious clamps to simple test (for use in daily routine) the expected findings may be used for designing multicentre prevention trials or directly translated into preventive medicine.
DFG Programme Clinical Research Units

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