I read with great interest the recent article by Wolpert et al. (1) in which they compared postprandial responses elicited by low- and high-fat dinner test meals and concluded that dietary fat increases glucose levels and insulin requirements in people with type 1 diabetes. This is consistent with recent results of ours showing that adding 20 g of fat as margarine to 110 g of bread (50 g starch) reduced the glycemic response in subjects without diabetes, but, if anything, tended to increase postprandial glucose in subjects with type 1 diabetes (2). We may have been unable to detect a significant increase in postprandial glucose because we added less than half the amount of fat to the test meal compared with Wolpert et al. (20 g vs. 50 g). Although Wolpert et al. performed a much more detailed, well-controlled, and sophisticated study than we did, they gave few details about the composition of the test meals; this makes comparison of their results with others in the literature difficult. Therefore, would Wolpert et al. please indicate the mean weight of the various foods in the low- and high-fat dinner test meals; the mean amounts of carbohydrate, dietary fiber, and protein; and, if possible, the nature of the fat they contained?

No potential conflicts of interest relevant to this article were reported.

1.
Wolpert
HA
,
Atakov-Castillo
A
,
Smith
SA
,
Steil
GM
.
Dietary fat acutely increases glucose concentrations and insulin requirements in patients with type 1 diabetes: implications for carbohydrate-based bolus dose calculation and intensive diabetes management
.
Diabetes Care
2013
;
36
:
810
816
2.
Wolever
TMS
,
Mullan
YM
.
Sugars and fat have different effects on postprandial glucose responses in normal and type 1 diabetic subjects
.
Nutr Metab Cardiovasc Dis
2011
;
21
:
719
725
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