The National Institutes of Health has provided $3.5 million for a large-scale clinical trial testing a radical new approach to managing Type 2 diabetes that in a previous study put nearly 70% of participants in remission without weight loss or medication.
UVA Health’s Daniel J. Cox developed the approach, built on the notion that educating people on making wise dietary and exercise choices can allow them to control their blood sugar and possibly alter the course of the disease.
“Instead of focusing on reducing weight with diets or medication, we focus on reducing how much blood glucose goes up and stays up after eating and drinking,” said Cox, professor of psychiatry and internal medicine at the University of Virginia School of Medicine. “These blood glucose elevations are what leads to high A1C and cardiovascular risks among adults with Type 2 diabetes.”
More than 30 million people worldwide have Type 2 diabetes, a condition in which the body becomes unable to regulate blood sugar. This can lead to heart disease, kidney disease, blindness and other serious medical conditions. Type 2 diabetes typically affects people over age 45, but is increasingly striking children, teenagers and young adults. Many people must use medication or insulin injections to manage the condition.

