Randomized Study of Metformin and Intensive Lifestyle Intervention on Cancer Incidence over 21 years of follow-up in the Diabetes Prevention Program.

Brandy M Heckman-Stoddard, Jill P Crandall, Sharon L Edelstein, Philip C Prorok, Dana Dabelea, Richard Hamman, Helen P Hazuda, Edward Horton, Mary A Hoskin, Marjorie Perloff, Anna Bowers, William C Knowler, Leslie G Ford, Marinella Temprosa
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Abstract

Meta-analyses have reported a decrease in overall cancer incidence of approximately 10-40% with metformin use among individuals with diabetes. Lifestyle change could potentially reduce cancer incidence. The objective was to determine whether metformin or intensive lifestyle intervention (ILS) reduces the risk of cancer among adults at high risk of diabetes. The Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP, 1996-2001) randomized 3234 participants to ILS, metformin (850 mg twice daily), or blinded placebo. During follow-up through the DPP Outcomes Study (DPPOS), all participants were offered a modified lifestyle intervention, and metformin continued open-label metformin group. Participants reported cancer cases annually. Medical records were adjudicated for all reported events. The primary endpoint was total cancer incidence, comparing metformin versus placebo, with ILS versus placebo as a secondary objective. After a median follow-up of 21 years, 546 participants (173 metformin, 182 ILS, and 191 placebo) were diagnosed with a first incident cancer. Incidence rates of cancer were 9.8, 10.5, and 10.8 per 1,000 person-years in metformin, ILS, and placebo, respectively, with a hazard ratio (HR) of 0.90 (95%CI = 0.73 to 1.10) for metformin compared to placebo and 0.96 (95%CI = 0.79 to 1.18) for ILS compared to placebo. There were no differences between any treatment groups for obesity-related cancer or in sex-specific analyses. Neither assignment to metformin nor ILS reduced cancer incidence among adults at high risk of diabetes. These results may be impacted by increased non-study metformin usage over time due to the development of diabetes and reduced intensity of ILS intervention over time.

二甲双胍和强化生活方式干预对糖尿病预防项目21年随访中癌症发病率的随机研究
荟萃分析报告,在糖尿病患者中使用二甲双胍可使总体癌症发病率降低约10-40%。生活方式的改变可能会降低癌症发病率。目的是确定二甲双胍或强化生活方式干预(ILS)是否能降低糖尿病高危成人患癌症的风险。糖尿病预防项目(DPP, 1996-2001)将3234名参与者随机分配到ILS、二甲双胍(850毫克,每日两次)或盲法安慰剂组。在DPP结局研究(DPPOS)的随访期间,所有参与者都接受了改良的生活方式干预,二甲双胍继续开放标签二甲双胍组。参与者每年报告癌症病例。所有报告的事件都有医疗记录。主要终点是癌症总发病率,比较二甲双胍与安慰剂,ILS与安慰剂作为次要目标。在中位21年的随访后,546名参与者(173名服用二甲双胍,182名服用ILS, 191名服用安慰剂)被诊断为首次发生癌症。二甲双胍、ILS和安慰剂组的癌症发病率分别为9.8、10.5和10.8 / 1000人年,与安慰剂相比,二甲双胍的风险比(HR)为0.90 (95%CI = 0.73至1.10),ILS与安慰剂相比的风险比(HR)为0.96 (95%CI = 0.79至1.18)。在肥胖相关癌症的治疗组之间或在性别特异性分析中没有差异。在糖尿病高风险的成人中,二甲双胍和ILS均不能降低癌症发病率。随着时间的推移,由于糖尿病的发展,非研究二甲双胍的使用增加,ILS干预强度降低,这些结果可能受到影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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