Type 2 Diabetes (T2D)Nutrition & DietBehavioral Intervention
RESEARCH SUMMARY

Lifestyle calorie-carbohydrate plans improved type 2 diabetes remission versus usual care

Moderate confidence
some concerns bias
Last updated May 26, 2026

Key takeaway:

In adults with early type 2 diabetes, both calorie-carbohydrate restriction alone and with time-restricted feeding increased remission and improved glycemic and cardiometabolic outcomes versus usual care over 6 months.

Study at a glance

What was studied

Two food-based lifestyle interventions for remission in type 2 diabetes versus usual care.

Study type

Randomized Controlled Trials (RCTs)

duration

Medium-Term (3–12 mo)

Intervention

Calorie restriction, Low-carbohydrate diet

Outcomes

HbA1c, Fasting Plasma Glucose, Body weight, Diabetes remission, Body fat mass

Funding

Non-industry sponsored

Main effects

Diabetes remission increased versus control in both CCR and IFCCR groups

HbA1c and fasting blood glucose were lower in both intervention groups versus control

Body weight, waist circumference, blood pressure, and cardiometabolic markers improved versus control

Evidence Summary

InterventionOutcomeMeasured ChangeStudy Effect
Diet and Nutrition
Calorie restriction
(Diet and Nutrition)
Weight & Anthropometrics
Body weight
(Weight & Anthropometrics)
Decrease
Strong
Diet and Nutrition
Calorie restriction
(Diet and Nutrition)
Glycemic Control
Diabetes remission
(Glycemic Control)
Increase
Strong
Diet and Nutrition
Calorie restriction
(Diet and Nutrition)
Glycemic Control
Fasting Plasma Glucose
(Glycemic Control)
Decrease
Strong
Diet and Nutrition
Calorie restriction
(Diet and Nutrition)
Glycemic Control
HbA1c
(Glycemic Control)
Decrease
Strong
Diet and Nutrition
Low-carbohydrate diet
(Diet and Nutrition)
Weight & Anthropometrics
Body fat mass
(Weight & Anthropometrics)
Decrease
Strong
Diet and Nutrition
Low-carbohydrate diet
(Diet and Nutrition)
Weight & Anthropometrics
Body weight
(Weight & Anthropometrics)
Decrease
Strong
Diet and Nutrition
Low-carbohydrate diet
(Diet and Nutrition)
Glycemic Control
Diabetes remission
(Glycemic Control)
Increase
Strong
Diet and Nutrition
Low-carbohydrate diet
(Diet and Nutrition)
Glycemic Control
Fasting Plasma Glucose
(Glycemic Control)
Decrease
Strong
Diet and Nutrition
Low-carbohydrate diet
(Diet and Nutrition)
Glycemic Control
HbA1c
(Glycemic Control)
Decrease
Strong

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evidence suggest

Evidence Suggest

  • Remission occurred in 9/40 (22.5%) CCR, 12/40 (30.0%) IFCCR, and 1/40 (2.5%) control participants.
  • At 6 months, both intervention groups had lower HbA1c and fasting glucose than control (both p<0.001 for each intervention vs control).
  • Both interventions significantly improved weight, fat mass, lipids, blood pressure, and insulin-resistance indices versus control.
who this applies

Who this applies to

Adults with type 2 diabetes diagnosed within about 5 years

keep in mind

Keep in Mind

Both active plans outperformed usual care, but IFCCR was not clearly superior to CCR for remission.

between the lines

Between the Lines

  • Participants and intervention providers were not blinded due to diet intervention nature.
  • Control-group remission events were sparse, creating wide confidence intervals.
  • Follow-up was 6 months, so durability of remission remains uncertain.
  • Single specialized-center context may limit generalizability to lower-resource settings.

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Journal Reference

Badrooj N, Esteghamati A, Djafarian K, et al. The effect of integrated lifestyle intervention incorporating calorie-carbohydrate restriction with or without time-restricted feeding for remission of type 2 diabetes (DIREM): a single blind randomised controlled trial. Endocrinol Diabetes Metab. 2026;9(3):e70209. doi:10.1002/edm2.70209

Connected Evidence

Discover how this study fits into the broader diabetes evidence landscape.

This study contributes to evidence on Low-carbohydrate diet and Body weight, Low-carbohydrate diet and Fasting Plasma Glucose.

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