Pharmacotherapy for Patients with Obesity

Although pharmacotherapy is not the cornerstone of obesity treatment, it is a valuable tool that could be considered for patients who have not had adequate benefit from lifestyle interventions or who have difficulty maintaining initial weight loss over longer periods. This review focuses on the role...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical chemistry (Baltimore, Md.) Md.), 2018-01, Vol.64 (1), p.118-129
Hauptverfasser: Gadde, Kishore M, Apolzan, John W, Berthoud, Hans-Rudolf
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container_title Clinical chemistry (Baltimore, Md.)
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creator Gadde, Kishore M
Apolzan, John W
Berthoud, Hans-Rudolf
description Although pharmacotherapy is not the cornerstone of obesity treatment, it is a valuable tool that could be considered for patients who have not had adequate benefit from lifestyle interventions or who have difficulty maintaining initial weight loss over longer periods. This review focuses on the role of antiobesity drugs, the mechanisms by which the drugs work, potential pharmacological targets in the neural control of food intake and regulation of body weight, the history of antiobesity drugs, a summary of efficacy and safety data from clinical trials, and the clinical application of pharmacotherapy. Currently, 5 approved drug therapies are available in the US for long-term weight management, with only 2 of these meeting the stronger Food and Drug Administration (FDA) criteria of 5% weight loss relative to a placebo after 1 year and others receiving approval based on the categorical criterion of the proportions of patients achieving 5% weight loss. Interpretation of the results of clinical trials conducted before regulatory agency approval is limited by high dropout rates; thus, the results might not be replicable in clinical practice settings. Many patients who are suitable candidates for pharmacotherapy are not using the new drugs due to lack of insurance coverage and high out-of-pocket costs. With the availability of 4 new drugs since 2012, clinicians in the US now have more tools for long-term weight management. The quality of pharmacotherapy clinical investigations needs considerable improvement. Future research should focus on examining the mediators and moderators of response.
doi_str_mv 10.1373/clinchem.2017.272815
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source MEDLINE; Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current)
subjects Anti-Obesity Agents - pharmacology
Anti-Obesity Agents - therapeutic use
Body Mass Index
Body weight
Body weight loss
Clinical medicine
Clinical trials
Data processing
Diabetes
Diet
Drug Approval
Drug development
Drug therapy
Drugs
Energy
Exercise
FDA approval
Federal regulation
Food
Food intake
Gastrointestinal surgery
Homeostasis
Humans
Intervention
Lifestyles
Medical research
Moderators
Neural networks
Obesity
Obesity - drug therapy
Obesity - metabolism
Patient Selection
Patients
Pharmacology
Physical fitness
Prescription drugs
Regulatory agencies
United States
United States Food and Drug Administration
Weight control
Weight loss
Weight Loss - drug effects
title Pharmacotherapy for Patients with Obesity
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