Among overweight and obese adults with type 2 diabetes, an intensive lifestyle intervention led to a relative reduction of 48% in the severity of mobility-related disability, as compared with diabetes support and education. This effect was mediated by both weight loss and improvement in fitness. Group differences that favored the lifestyle-intervention group were most striking in the severe-disability category. However, as shown by prevalence rates in the good-mobility category during all 4 years of the study, participants in the lifestyle-intervention group also retained higher levels of healthy functioning than those in the support group. The proportion of participants with the highest level of functioning at baseline in the support group was generally stable until year 3 and then declined. By contrast, in the lifestyle-intervention group, there was an increase in the prevalence in the good-mobility category by year 2, and rates never fell below baseline. Difficulty in bending over was a harbinger for the loss of mobility, possibly because older adults who have difficulty with such movement are at risk for being sedentary. Deficits in mobility are a risk factor for the onset and progression of most chronic diseases, including cardiovascular disease.
36 Mobility is an important component of quality of life,
22 and severe mobility-related disability increases rates of institutionalization.
37The role of weight loss and improved fitness in reducing rates of mobility-related disability is underscored by the mediation analysis.
32 Although weight loss was slightly more influential in preventing the loss of mobility than was improved fitness, both factors contributed independently to the observed effect. One plausible explanation for this pattern is that weight loss may improve relative strength in the lower limbs and even facilitate balance, two components of fitness that are important to mobility.
38 Not surprisingly, weight loss was found to be related to dietary adherence. Wadden et al.
39 recently reported that participants in the lifestyle-intervention group who lost at least 10% of their initial weight at the 4-year assessment consumed fewer calories than those who gained weight (P<0.001). The mean daily caloric intake of participants who lost at least 10% of their initial weight was 1565.5 kcal, a value that is consistent with the intervention goals.
39Our findings support other 4-year analyses of data from the Look AHEAD study that attest to the long-term efficacy of the intensive lifestyle intervention on weight loss, increased fitness, and improvement in the risk profile for cardiovascular disease.
24 Although the current findings may seem limited in light of this previous work and related reports that are based on 1-year data,
40,41 these are the first data from Look AHEAD to show that the intensive lifestyle intervention also reduced the risk of loss of mobility. This is an important finding for clinical medicine, given the importance of disability in patients with type 2 diabetes
8 and the fact that the prevalence of type 2 diabetes will increase as the population ages.
5,6 The findings also reinforce results from related research. For example, an 18-month study involving older, overweight or obese adults with knee osteoarthritis showed that a combined treatment of weight loss and exercise was superior to either exercise or diet alone in improving measures of disability.
42 In a 12-month study involving older adults with mild-to-moderate frailty, Villareal and colleagues
38 recently reported that exercise and weight loss each reduced rates of physical disability, as compared with a control intervention that was restricted to the provision of general information about a healthy diet, but the combination of the two interventions was superior to either one alone. Finally, an 18-month weight-management and exercise study among older, overweight or obese adults with metabolic dysfunction compared the effects of three treatments (exercise only, weight loss plus exercise, and successful-aging education) on the results of a 400-m walk test. Exercise benefited mobility, as compared with successful-aging education, but the most favorable effect occurred when participants lost weight in conjunction with exercise.
43In summary, our findings confirm the clinical importance of declining mobility as adults with type 2 diabetes age. Although our measure of mobility was not based on performance, it had considerable clinical relevance with expected relationships to BMI, coexisting illnesses, baseline estimated metabolic equivalents, and sex. Furthermore, both weight loss and improved fitness were determinants of this effect.