| Literature DB >> 19649212 |
Paolo Leombruni1, Luca Lavagnino, Secondo Fassino.
Abstract
Topiramate is an anticonvulsant drug used for the treatment of epilepsy and prophylaxis of migraine. Some authors have proposed its use as a mood stabilizer and have reported its efficacy in reducing impulsiveness and improving mood regulation, possibly via its antagonism to glutamatergic transmission in the lateral hypothalamus, although this indication is still controversial. Weight loss is a side effect consistently reported in the medical literature in patients treated with topiramate. Given its potential role in stabilizing mood and reducing impulse control problems and weight, topiramate has been proposed as a treatment for obese patients with binge eating disorder (BED). The aim of this paper is to review published data on the efficacy and safety of topiramate for the treatment of obese subjects with BED. Although the evidence is preliminary, topiramate appears to be a relatively safe and effective treatment for obese subjects with BED. Limitations of the studies and future directions for research are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: binge eating disorder; obesity; topiramate
Year: 2009 PMID: 19649212 PMCID: PMC2714287 DOI: 10.2147/ndt.s3420
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
Topiramate treatment studies in obese subjects with BED
| Authors | Diagnosis | Weight loss (RCTs) | Design and number of patients | Topiramate dose range | Duration | Efficacy/Effectiveness |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Appolinario | BED | – | Case study (n = 1) | 150 mg/day | 12 weeks | Binge eating episodes remitted within 30 days |
| Schmidt do Prado-Lima | BED, MDD | – | Case study (n = 1) | 300 mg/day; venlafaxine
| 15 months | Remission of binge eating
|
| Appolinario | BED | – | Case series (n = 8) | 150 mg/day | 16 weeks | Reduction in binge eating, depressive symptoms significantly reduced |
| McElroy | BED | −5.9 kg (topiramate group) vs −1.2 kg (placebo group) | RCT (n = 61) | 100–600 mg/day | 14 weeks | Greater reductions in the topiramate group in binge frequency
|
| McElroy | BED | −6 kg (topiramate group) | Open-label (n = 35) | 342 ± 257 | 42 weeks | Reductions in mean binge frequency, CGI-S scores, YBOCS-BE total scores |
| Zilberstein | BED | – | Case series (n = 16) | 50 mg/day | 13 weeks | Mean increase in weight loss from 20.4% to 34.1% in 14 of 16 patients |
| Guerdjikova | BED | – | Case series (n = 3) | 175–1000 mg/day | 4–17 months | Remission of binge eating, improvement in CGI score |
| Claudino | BED in patients already receiving CBT | −6.8 kg (topiramate group) vs −0.9 (placebo group) | RCT (n = 73) | 200–300 mg/day | 21 weeks | Greater weight reduction, BMI reduction, percentage of remission rate, BDI reduction
|
| McElroy | BED | −4.5 kg (topiramate group) vs − 0.2 kg (placebo group) | RCT (n = 394) | 25–400 mg/day | 16 weeks | Reduction in binge eating days/week
|
Abbreviations: BD, bipolar disorder; BDI, Beck Depression inventory; BES, Binge eating Scale; BIS-11, Barrat Impulsiveness Scale version 11; BMI, body mass index; CBT, cognitive behavior therapy; MDD, major depressive disorder; RCT, randomized controlled trial; CGI, Clinical and Global Impression; CGI-S, Clinical and Global Impression severity scale; YBOCS, Yale Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale; YBOCS-BE, Yale Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale modified for binge eating; TFEQ, Three-Factor eating Questionnaire; SDS, Sheenan Disability Scale.