Interrupting prolonged sitting with frequent short bouts of light-intensity activity in people with type 1 diabetes improves glycaemic control without increasing hypoglycaemia: The SIT-LESS randomised controlled trial
Aim
To examine the impact of interrupting prolonged sitting with frequent short bouts of light-intensity activity on glycaemic control in people with type 1 diabetes (T1D).
Materials and Methods
In total, 32 inactive adults with T1D [aged 27.9 ± 4.7 years, 15 men, diabetes duration 16.0 ± 6.9 years and glycated haemoglobin 8.4 ± 1.4% (68 ± 2.3 mmol/mol)] underwent two 7-h experimental conditions in a randomised crossover fashion with >7-day washout consisting of: uninterrupted sitting (SIT), or, interrupted sitting with 3-min bouts of self-paced walking at 30-min intervals (SIT-LESS). Standardised mixed-macronutrient meals were administered 3.5 h apart during each condition. Blinded continuous glucose monitoring captured interstitial glucose responses during the 7-h experimental period and for a further 48-h under free-living conditions.
Results
SIT-LESS reduced total mean glucose (SIT 8.2 ± 2.6 vs. SIT-LESS 6.9 ± 1.7 mmol/L, p = .001) and increased time in range (3.9-10.0 mmol/L) by 13.7% (SIT 71.5 ± 9.5 vs. SIT-LESS 85.1 ± 7.1%, p = .002). Hyperglycaemia (>10.0 mmol/L) was reduced by 15.0% under SIT-LESS (SIT 24.2 ± 10.8 vs. SIT-LESS 9.2 ± 6.4%, p = .002), whereas hypoglycaemia exposure (<3.9 mmol/L) (SIT 4.6 ± 3.0 vs. SIT-LESS 6.0 ± 6.0%, p = .583) was comparable across conditions. SIT-LESS reduced glycaemic variability (coefficient of variation %) by 7.8% across the observation window (p = .021). These findings were consistent when assessing discrete time periods, with SIT-LESS improving experimental and free-living postprandial, whole-day and night-time glycaemic outcomes (p < .05).
Conclusions
Interrupting prolonged sitting with frequent short bouts of light-intensity activity improves acute postprandial and 48-h glycaemia in adults with T1D. This pragmatic strategy is an efficacious approach to reducing sedentariness and increasing physical activity levels without increasing risk of hypoglycaemia in T1D.
Funding
Can Breaks from Sitting Improve Glucose Control and Vascular Health in People with Type 1 Diabetes?
Diabetes UK
Find out more...History
Citation
Campbell MD, Alobaid AM, Hopkins M, et al. Interrupting prolonged sitting with frequent short bouts of light-intensity activity in people with type 1 diabetes improves glycaemic control without increasing hypoglycaemia: The SIT-LESS randomised controlled trial. Diabetes Obes Metab. 2023; 25(12): 3589-3598. doi:10.1111/dom.15254Author affiliation
College of Life Sciences/Population Health SciencesVersion
- VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
DIABETIC MEDICINEVolume
40issn
0742-3071eissn
1464-5491Acceptance date
2023-08-08Copyright date
2023Available date
2024-04-22Publisher DOI
Language
enPublisher version
Deposited by
Dr Paddy DempseyDeposit date
2024-03-28Data Access Statement
Deidentified participant data collected during the trial alongside the study protocol and statistical analysis plan will be made available beginning 3 months and ending 36 months following article publication for investigators whose proposed use of the data has been approved by an independent review committee identified for this purpose. Proposals may be submitted up to 36 months following article publication and should be directed to matthew.campbell@sunderland.ac.uk to gain access, data requestors will need to sign a data access agreement. After 36 months the data will be available in our university's data warehouse but without investigator support other than deposited metadata.Rights Retention Statement
- No