| Literature DB >> 21629521 |
Abstract
UNLABELLED: Overweight and obesity among children and adolescents continue to be a global public health epidemic. Current national data on childhood and adolescent obesity show alarming statistics of overweight and obese children and adolescents. This epidemic runs across various continents and affects various ethnic populations. The current weight management practices involve dietary modification, behavioral change therapies involving exercise, pharmacological therapy and surgical intervention. The purpose of this current review is to focus on pharmacological therapy i.e. role of sibutramine and orlistat in childhood and adolescent weight management. An open search of PUBMED database was made with search key words such as orlistat or sibutramine or pharmacological approaches and child obesity and adolescent obesity. This yielded a total of 20 articles. All of these articles have been summarized in the current review. Sibutramine functions by promoting satiety and increases energy expenditure by inhibiting reuptake of noradrenaline and serotonin. Most of the studies, reviews and trials conducted using sibutramine among adolescents and children show limited short-term efficacy. The long-term effects of sibutramine use are not yet studied due to the severity of its side-effects profile. Orlistat was approved by Food and Drug Administration for adolescent weight reduction. Despite its approval, it has a limited role in adolescent and pediatric obesity reduction due to the purported malabsorption of fat soluble vitamins and its side-effect profile. Obesity and adolescent weight management in present times mainly deals with dietary modification with superadded behavioral therapies promoting exercise. There is insufficient evidence as of now if these alone would cause adequate weight reduction and weight maintenance. Pharmacotherapy i.e use of drugs like sibutramine and orlistat has a limited role in the current fight against childhood and adolescent obesity. Extreme side-effects, close monitoring and lack of long-term studies involving these drugs, suggest questionable efficacy in current times. Future research studies involving pharmacological agents need to not only have immense scientific rigor during preliminary analyses but should also translate their efficacy in practical and clinical settings. KEYWORDS: Obesity; Overweight; Adolescents; Pharmacological; sibutramine; Orlistat.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21629521 PMCID: PMC3104647 DOI: 10.4021/jocmr2010.05.288w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med Res ISSN: 1918-3003
Pharmacological Approaches and Other Related Studies for the Management of Child and Adolescent Obesity-2007-2010
| Authors/Year | Type of study | Methods | Results | Conclusion |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1) Rogovik study/2010 [ | Review | Review of current literature related to role of pharmacotherapy and weight loss supplements in childhood obesity management | Orlistat is the only FDA approved drug among the group of weight loss medications for the treatment of overweight and obese adolescents. | Researchers conclude that no single approach will successfully treat obesity, and lifestyle modification presently remains the main pillar of any intervention aiming at decreasing bodyweight. |
| 2) Whitlock study/2010 [ | Systematic review | Researchers reviewed database of abstracts | Two medications showed significant weight loss | Short-term benefits of comprehensive medium- to high-intensity behavioral interventions in obese children and adolescents. |
| 3) Coutinho study /2009 [ | Review | Review of several studies using combination therapy of orlistat and sibutramine | It will be plausible to combine both drugs for beneficial effects. | Orlistat has proven its efficacy in the XENDOS study. Its role in the SCOUT study is yet awaited. |
| 4) Czernichow study/2009 [ | Meta-analysis of Randomized-controlled trials. | Total of eight trials with sample size of 1391 individuals was included in the present analysis | The mean decrease in weight between the intervention and the control group was 5.25 kg (95% CI 3.03-7.48) after a minimum follow-up of 6 months. | There was little evidence that treatment was associated with risk on cardiovascular risk factors. |
| 5) Kanekar study/2009 [ | Meta-analysis | Electronic databases were searched for school-based childhood obesity interventions and a total of five studies were analyzed. | The results of the pooled estimate of reviewed studies were not significant for the outcome measure body mass index at p < 0.05 level. | Current school-based childhood obesity interventions do not seem to modify body mass index |
| 6) Tziomalos study/2009 [ | Review | The most important articles on sibutramine up to January 2009 were located by a PubMed and Medline search | Sibutramine reduces food intake and body weight more than placebo | Sibutramine, in conjunction with lifestyle measures, is a useful drug for reducing body weight |
| 7) Godoy-Matos study/2009 [ | Review | Review of non-pharmacological, pharmacological and surgical treatment for obesity. | Pharmacological and surgical management is effective in weight reduction. | Sibutramine and orlistat may be good pharmacological options when lifestyle modifications alone do not work. |
| 8) Oude Luttikhuis study/2009 [ | Review | Review of randomized controlled trials of lifestyle, drug and surgical interventions was done from 1985-2008 | Reduction in overweight at 6 and 12 months follow up was seen with or without the addition of orlistat or sibutramine | Combined behavioral lifestyle interventions can produce a significant and clinically meaningful reduction in overweight |
| 9) Rogovik study/2009 [ | Review | Review of weight-loss supplements and role of pharmacotherapy | Pharmacotherapy should be considered for children older than 12 years old | Most weight-loss supplements cannot be recommended at this time for children |
| 10) Woo study/2009 [ | Review | Review of pharmacological treatments for obesity, surgical options and recommendations for pediatric primary care | Lifestyle modification is the mainstay of obesity treatment for all ages. Pharmacotherapy reserved for specific adolescents | Therapies that are available to treat severely obese adolescents are discussed |
| 11) Viner study/2009 [ | Review | Review of population-based prescribing data from UK between 1999-2006 | The annual prevalence of anti obesity drug prescriptions rose significantly in 2006, a 15-fold increase | Further research into the effectiveness and safety of antiobesity drugs in clinical populations of children and adolescents is needed |
| 12) Elfhag study/2008 [ | Retrospective study | Data was collected on 478 obese patients on different types of previous weight loss treatments | Sibutramine and orlistat both produced weight loss | Sibutramine exhibits its greatest effects in whom eating is a natural response to hunger |
| 13) Uli study/2008 [ | Review | Guidelines recommended by an expert panel were used | Staged-approach for treatment of childhood obesity is suggested | Health policy interventions can prevent obesity |
| 14) Whitlock study/2008 [ | Review | Two systematic reviews used | Medications + behavior change | Policy development is the key |
| 15) Moya study/2008 [ | Review | The methodology involved identification of pediatric population at risk | Treatment guides were presented along with other individual prevention studies | Involving motivated pediatricians and better follow-up in the frame of general national preventive program can be a rational outcome |
| 16) McGovern study/2008 [ | Systematic review | Data sources used were nine electronic databases from inception until Feb 2006 | Short-term medications were effective, including sibutramine | There is a limited evidence of short-term efficacy of medications and lifestyle interventions |
| 17) Baumer study/2007 [ | Review | Public health guidance clinical guidelines produced | Two quick reference guides summarize the public health and clinical recommendations for both adults and children | Need for future research related to obesity prevention |
| 18) Danielsson study/2007 [ | A double-blind placebo controlled cross-over study | BMI scores were analyzed using a repeated-measures design (ANOVA) | Sibutramine treated group showed a significant decrease in BMI scores compared to placebo group (p < 0.001) | Sibutramine lead to clinically and statistically significant weight reduction in short-term. |
| 19) Singhal study/2007 [ | Review | Evaluation of dietary, pharmacological and surgical management of obesity | Lifestyle interventions and behavioral modification are essential for obesity management | Further evaluation research is needed. |
| 20) Spear study/2007 [ | Review | Various behaviors reviewed | 4-staged weight approach suggested | Office-based behaviors need to be modified |