
The U.S. Diabetes Prevention Program, or DPP, reported on April 28 the 21-year follow-up of a randomized clinical trial, showing that the original intensive lifestyle intervention reduced the development of diabetes by 24% and metformin reduced diabetes development by 17%.
The DPP had previously shown that after the first three years of study, the intensive lifestyle aimed at moderate weight loss and increased physical activity, and the medication metformin reduced the onset of type 2 diabetes by 58% and 31%, respectively, compared with a placebo medicine. All participants were adults at high risk of developing diabetes.
The long-term follow-up of 3,195 DPP participants, reported in Lancet Diabetes and Endocrinology, highlights the long-term benefits of the interventions in preventing the development of diabetes. Compared with the original placebo group, the median time without diabetes was extended by 3.5 years in the lifestyle group and 2.5 years in the metformin group.
The original DPP clinical trial started in 1996, when the participants were 51 years old, on average, and 45% identified as members of U.S. minority groups who are especially affected by type 2 diabetes. The long-term benefits of the two interventions extended across all of the racial-ethnic groups included in the study.
In summary, the large intervention effects seen in the first few years of the trial led to sustained reductions in diabetes development over 21 years, increasing the years without diabetes. Despite the challenges in maintaining long-term intensive lifestyle and medicine interventions, even short-term interventions have long-lasting benefits, the study shows.
The DPP/DPPOS site at Pennington Biomedical Research Center currently follows 76 residents in the Baton Rouge area who have been with the study for 26 to nearly 30 years.
“Since Pennington Biomedical’s founding Executive Director Dr. George Bray began studying these individuals in 1996, DPP participants have displayed some of the very best qualities that Louisianians have to offer: hard work, dedication, and commitment to a greater good that is much bigger than themselves,” said current site leader Dr. Owen Carmichael, Director of Biomedical Imaging and Professor at Pennington Biomedical.
“Frankly, these Louisianans have helped to change the course of modern medicine—not just in Baton Rouge, but worldwide—for the better.”
More information:
William C Knowler et al, Long-term effects and effect heterogeneity of lifestyle and metformin interventions on type 2 diabetes incidence over 21 years in the US Diabetes Prevention Program randomised clinical trial, The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology (2025). DOI: 10.1016/S2213-8587(25)00022-1
Louisiana State University
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Both lifestyle and metformin interventions show long-term benefits in reducing type 2 diabetes (2025, April 29)
retrieved 29 April 2025
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