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Randomized Controlled Trial
. 2008 Jun;32(6):985-91.
doi: 10.1038/ijo.2008.8. Epub 2008 Feb 12.

Dietary adherence and weight loss success among overweight women: results from the A TO Z weight loss study

Affiliations
Randomized Controlled Trial

Dietary adherence and weight loss success among overweight women: results from the A TO Z weight loss study

S Alhassan et al. Int J Obes (Lond). 2008 Jun.

Abstract

Background: Dietary adherence has been implicated as an important factor in the success of dieting strategies; however, studies assessing and investigating its association with weight loss success are scarce.

Objective: We aimed to document the level of dietary adherence using measured diet data and to examine its association with weight loss success.

Design: Secondary analysis was performed using data from 181 free-living overweight/obese women (mean+/-s.d. age=43+/-5 years, body mass index=31+/-4 kg m(-2)) participating in a 1-year randomized clinical trial (the A TO Z study) comparing popular weight loss diets (Atkins, Zone and Ornish). Participants' dietary adherence was assessed as the difference between their respective assigned diet's recommended macronutrient goals and their self-reported intake. Association between dietary adherence and 12-month weight change was computed using Spearman's correlations. Differences in baseline characteristics and macronutrient intake between the most and least adherent tertiles for diet groups were compared using t-tests.

Results: Within each diet group, adherence score was significantly correlated with 12-month weight change (Atkins, r(s)=0.42, P=0.0003; Zone, r(s)=0.34, P=0.009 and Ornish, r(s)=0.38, P=0.004). Twelve-month weight change in the most vs least adherent tertiles, respectively, was -8.3+/-5.6 vs -1.9+/-5.8 kg, P=0.0006 (Atkins); -3.7+/-6.3 vs -0.4+/-6.8 kg, P=0.12 (Zone) and -6.5+/-6.8 vs -1.7+/-7.9 kg, P=0.06 (Ornish).

Conclusions: Regardless of assigned diet groups, 12-month weight change was greater in the most adherent compared to the least adherent tertiles. These results suggest that strategies to increase adherence may deserve more emphasis than the specific macronutrient composition of the weight loss diet itself in supporting successful weight loss.

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Conflict of interest statement

None of the other authors had a personal or financial conflict of interest.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Weight loss by tertile of dietary adherence. Mean±s.e. Tertile 1=most adherent and Tertile 3=least adherent. Statistical testing of differences between tertiles for each diet group was conducted using t-tests.

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