| Literature DB >> 23404388 |
Ursula Werneke1, David Taylor, Thomas A B Sanders.
Abstract
Weight gain remains a well recognized yet difficult to treat adverse effect of many anti-psychotic drugs including agents of the first and second generation. The weight gain liabilities of antipsychotic drugs are partly associated with their ability to increase appetite. Most behavioral interventions for weight control remain of limited efficacy, possibly because they do not specifically target the neuroendocrine factors regulating appetite. Identifying new weight management interventions directly acting on the biochemical and neuroendocrine mechanisms of anti-psychotic induced weight gain may help to improve the efficacy of behavioral weight management programs. Such potentially specific strategies include (1) using diets which do not increase appetite despite calorie restriction; (2) countering thirst as an anticholinergic side-effect; (3) discouraging cannabis use and (4) adding metformin to a behavioral intervention. In view of our currently rather limited treatment repertoire it seems timely systematically to explore such novel options.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23404388 PMCID: PMC3586399 DOI: 10.1007/s11920-012-0347-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Psychiatry Rep ISSN: 1523-3812 Impact factor: 5.285
Some factors regulating eating behavior
| Substance | Organ of origin | Mechanism of action |
|---|---|---|
| Stimulating food intake | ||
| NPY | HPT | Stimulates neurons triggering eating behavior [ |
| AgRP | HPT | Inhibits activity of neurons stimulating melanocortin via GABA. Melanocortin decrease eating behavior as outlined below [ |
| MCH | HPT | Facilitates action of leptin. ↑ during fasting when leptin levels fall [ |
| Projects into the cortex, the amygdala and the spinal cord. | ||
| Orexins | HPT | Regulates feeding behavior and the sleep wake cycle [ |
| AMPK | HPT | Intracellular energy sensor acting on ATP concentration. Facilitates production of ATP by opening catabolic and closing anabolic pathways [ |
| Ghrelin | ST | Short acting. ↑ eating when the stomach is empty [ |
| May inhibit insulin release [ | ||
| Decreasing food intake | ||
| Melanocortin producing hormones including α-MSH and β-MSH. | HPT | Block neurons stimulating eating behavior. Counteract NYP and AgRP [ |
| BDNF | HPT | Unclear, may be stimulated by MC4-R in the ventromedial area of the HPT [ |
| Insulin | PANC | Long-acting. Facilitates uptake of glucose in body tissues such as muscles and fat [ |
| Leptin | Mainly AT | Long-acting Fat sensor feeding back the amount of triglycerides to the brain by acting on NPY, AgRP, melanocortin and MSH in the hypothalamus [ |
| If leptin levels ↑ eating ↓. If leptin levels ↓ eating ↑ [ | ||
| Regulates transcription of thyrotropin-releasing hormone jointly with MSH [ | ||
| Obesity may cause leptin resistance so that eating is not longer reduced when leptin levels are high [ | ||
| CKK, GLP-1, YY, PYY3-36, etc. | SI | Signals a feeling of fullness and satiety [ |
| Glucagon, amylin, etc. | PANC | Amylin may regulate meal size together with CKK and GLP-1 [ |
AT: adipose tissue; AMPK: Adenosinemonophosphate activated protein kinase; AgRP: Agouti-related peptide; BDNF: Brain-derived neurotropic factor CKK: cholecystokinin; GLP-1: glucagon-like peptide-1; HPT: hypothalamus; MC4-R, melanocortin-4 receptor; MCH: Melanin-concentrating hormone; ɑ- and β-melanocyte stimulating hormone: ɑ-MSH and β-MSH; NPY: neuropeptide Y; PYY3-36oxyntomodulinpeptide YY; PANC: pancreas; SI: Small intestine; ST: stomach
Effectiveness of behavioral interventions for appetite and weight control – evidence from systematic reviews and meta-analyses during the last ten years
| Study | Interventions identified as potentially successful | Effect size |
|---|---|---|
| Bonfioli E et al. 2012* [ | CBT and psycho-education, diet, exercise. Programs including all three components highest impact. Similar effects in pts with first episode or chronic psychosis. | Pooled ES for BMI |
| T: -0.86; 95% CI: -1.38 to -0.33 | ||
| P: -1.09; 95% CI: -1.51 to -0.68 | ||
| TOT: -0.98; 95% CI: -1.31 to -0.65 | ||
| Caemmerer et al. 2012 [ | Nutritional and/or exercise > CBT, but effectiveness of individual components difficult to judge since programs tended to overlap. Effect only seen in out-patient but not in in-patient or mixed trials. | Pooled ES for WGT in kg |
| T: -3.04; 95% CI: -4.39 to -1.68 | ||
| P: -3.23; 95% CI: -4.41 to -2.04 | ||
| Total: -3.12; 95% CI: -4.03 to -2.21 | ||
| Pooled ES for BMI: | ||
| TOT: -0.94; 95% CI: -1.45 to -0.43 | ||
| Gabriele et al. 2009 [ | T: Diet, exercise and psychological support. Increased length of intervention may lead to additional weight loss. | ES for WGT in kg |
| P: Counseling on diet and exercise may decrease the rate of weight gain but not prevent it all together. | T: mean: -2.63; range: -3.20 to - .40 | |
| P: mean: 2.44; range: 0.37 to 4.95 | ||
| Alvarez-Jiminez et al. 2008 [ | CBT and nutritional counseling, only one study tested a diet and exercise program. Individual superior to group interventions. No significant difference between counseling and CBT, prevention and treatment, pts with recent onset of schizophrenia and chronic schizophrenia. One trial pointed towards effectiveness of prevention in pts with recent onset. OP interventions more effective than IP or mixed sample interventions. | Pooled ES for WGT in kg: |
| Metformin outperformed behavioral intervention. | T: -2.32; 95% CI: -3.10 to -1.54 | |
| Metformin + behavioral intervention outperformed metformin. | P: -3.05; 95%, CI: -4.16 to -1.94 | |
| TOT: -2.56; 95% CI: -3.20 to -1.92 | ||
| Pooled ES for BMI: | ||
| TOT: -0.91; 95% CI:-1.13 to -0.68 | ||
| Faulkner et al. 2007 [ | CBT | Pooled ES for WGT in kg: |
| T: -1.69; 95% CI: -2.77 to -0.61 | ||
| P: -4.87; 95% CI: -7.11 to -2.64 | ||
| Pooled effect sizes BMI: | ||
| T: -0.66; 95% CI: -1.06 to -0.25 | ||
| P: -1.52; 95% CI: -2.25 to -0.79 | ||
| Faulkner et al. 2003 [ | Weight loss difficult but not impossible. Caloric restriction, reinforcement and adjunct CBT. Caloric restriction may work best for IP. Exercise could not be evaluated. | Range WGT in kg: -28.57 to 0.4 |
| Werneke et al. 2003 [ | Evidence remains limited. Calorie restriction in an IP setting, but significant deterioration of mental state can occur. Structured counseling and CBT. Life-style counseling and reinforcement. | Range (excluding case reports) WGT in kg: -5.9 to - 0.6, but results compared with controls NS in most of the included studies. |
CBT: cognitive behavioral therapy; m: month; ES: effect size; IP: inpatients; MA: meta-analysis; P: prevention; OP: outpatients; pt: patient; NS: not significant; SR: systematic review; T: treatment; TPT: total; WGT: weight; wk: week; y: year
*Provisional version