On 2014 Mar 24, Valter Silva commented:
LOOKing AHEAD... without losing sight plausibility
The LOOK AHEAD,<sup>1</sup> a rigorous study and paradoxical, showed no reduction in the rates of cardiovascular events or mortality with lifestyle interventions in type 2 diabetic patients. Several hypotheses have been raised:<sup>2</sup> (1) cardioprotective medications in the intervention group; (2) reduced effect after the first year; (3) lifestyle interventions need more follow-up; (4) unreliable outcomes masked the effect. Furthermore, could diabetes support and education (control group) produce beneficial changes by empowering patients? Yes! It is perfectly plausible and supported by a large body of evidence that interventions such as the control group received produces benefits, masking lifestyle intervention possible benefits. Considering the principle of plausibility of evidence-based medicine, exemplified by a systematic review of randomized controlled trials<sup>3</sup> about parachutes effectiveness for preventing death and major trauma, sometimes observational designs bring the best evidence. In brief, even with the findings of the LOOK AHEAD,<sup>1</sup> yet it is not plausible not to recommend interventions to change lifestyle, at the risk of stating that results of large studies (e.g. He J, 2005<sup>4</sup> and Lee IM, 2012<sup>5</sup> ) are not valid. In our viewpoint, instead of to declare "lifestyle intervention does not work", a plausibility conclusion for these results is "lifestyle intervention is quite as good as to receive diabetes support and education".
Valter Silva, PhD, Research assistant, Universidade Federal de São Paulo, SP, Brazil
Antonio Jose Grande, PhD, Associate professor, Universidade do Extremo Sul Catarinense, SC, Brazil
Competing interests: None declared.
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