#220 Less Pancakes, More Bacon? The Ketogenic Diet for Weight Loss
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- Systematic review of 13 RCTs of ketogenic versus low-fat diets, 1,577 participants (61% women, BMI 30-43). At 12-24 months ketogenic diet:1
- Lost 0.9 kg more than low-fat diet (statistically different).
- Statistically significant but likely clinically meaningless changes in surrogate markers (example LDL 0.12 mmol/L higher).
- Drop-out 13-84% across studies.
- Systematic review of 11 RCTs and 1,369 participants (71% women, BMI 30-36) at 6-24 months:2
- Ketogenic-type diet lost 2.2 kg versus low-fat diet, statistically different but results inconsistent.
- No difference if focus on higher quality studies.
- Surrogate marker changes similar to above.1,2
- Ketogenic-type diet lost 2.2 kg versus low-fat diet, statistically different but results inconsistent.
- Low-carbohydrate diet (<20 g/day at start) 6.0 kg versus low-fat diet 5.3 kg; not statistically different.
- Patient genotypes (favouring one diet type) had no impact on weight loss.
- Individual’s weight change varied from -30 to +10 kg in either group.
- Typical Canadian diet: 48% carbohydrate, 32% fat, 17% protein.10
- No standard definition for carbohydrate content in ketogenic diet, but most start with carbohydrate restriction of <20-50 g/day (10% of energy) for ~2 months before slow re-introduction of carbohydrates.1,11
- Weight loss peaks ~5 months, then slow regain.
- Example:12 From baseline, weight loss 6.5 kg at five months and 4.7 kg at one year.
- Tendency for decreased caloric intake on ketogenic diet.9,12,13
- Observational data suggests long-term low-carbohydrate consumption may be associated with increased mortality.14