Diabetes Prevention Program Outcomes Study: Difference between revisions

no edit summary
(Created page with "{{Program |ProgramName=Diabetes Prevention Program Outcomes Study |ProgramType=Program |OrgSponsor=National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases |TopOrganization=Department of Health and Human Services |CreationLegislation=Public Law 103-183 |Purpose=The Diabetes Prevention Program Outcomes Study aims to evaluate the long-term effects of interventions from the original Diabetes Prevention Program on preventing type 2 diabetes and its complications. It...")
 
No edit summary
 
Line 5: Line 5:
|TopOrganization=Department of Health and Human Services
|TopOrganization=Department of Health and Human Services
|CreationLegislation=Public Law 103-183
|CreationLegislation=Public Law 103-183
|Purpose=The Diabetes Prevention Program Outcomes Study aims to evaluate the long-term effects of interventions from the original Diabetes Prevention Program on preventing type 2 diabetes and its complications. It seeks to assess the durability of lifestyle changes and metformin in reducing diabetes incidence and improving health outcomes over decades.
|Purpose=Diabetes Prevention Program Outcomes Study tracks long-term effects of lifestyle and metformin on delaying type 2 diabetes and its complications.
|Website=https://dppos.bsc.gwu.edu/
|Website=https://dppos.bsc.gwu.edu/
|ProgramStart=2002
|ProgramStart=2002
|InitialFunding=Not publicly specified
|InitialFunding=Not publicly specified
|Duration=Ongoing
|Duration=Ongoing
|Historic=false
|Historic=No
}}
}}
The '''Diabetes Prevention Program Outcomes Study''' (DPPOS) is a long-term follow-up research program led by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) within the Department of Health and Human Services, building on the foundational Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) that concluded in 2002. Launched in 2002, DPPOS tracks the original DPP cohort—over 3,000 participants—to examine the sustained impact of intensive lifestyle interventions (achieving 7% weight loss and 150 minutes of weekly exercise) and metformin on type 2 diabetes prevention, as well as their effects on cardiovascular disease, cancer, and aging-related outcomes, providing critical data for public health strategies.
The '''Diabetes Prevention Program Outcomes Study''' (DPPOS) is a long-term follow-up research program led by the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) within the Department of Health and Human Services, building on the foundational Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP) that concluded in 2002. Launched in 2002, DPPOS tracks the original DPP cohort—over 3,000 participants—to examine the sustained impact of intensive lifestyle interventions (achieving 7% weight loss and 150 minutes of weekly exercise) and metformin on type 2 diabetes prevention, as well as their effects on cardiovascular disease, cancer, and aging-related outcomes, providing critical data for public health strategies.