| Literature DB >> 27013897 |
Luca Montesi1, Marwan El Ghoch2, Lucia Brodosi1, Simona Calugi2, Giulio Marchesini1, Riccardo Dalle Grave2.
Abstract
The long-term weight management of obesity remains a very difficult task, associated with a high risk of failure and weight regain. However, many people report that they have successfully managed weight loss maintenance in the long term. Several factors have been associated with better weight loss maintenance in long-term observational and randomized studies. A few pertain to the behavioral area (eg, high levels of physical activity, eating a low-calorie, low-fat diet; frequent self-monitoring of weight), a few to the cognitive component (eg, reduced disinhibition, satisfaction with results achieved, confidence in being able to lose weight without professional help), and a few to personality traits (eg, low novelty seeking) and patient-therapist interaction. Trials based on the most recent protocols of lifestyle modification, with a prolonged extended treatment after the weight loss phase, have also shown promising long-term weight loss results. These data should stimulate the adoption of a lifestyle modification-based approach for the management of obesity, featuring a nonphysician lifestyle counselor (also called "lifestyle trainer" or "healthy lifestyle practitioner") as a pivotal component of the multidisciplinary team. The obesity physicians maintain a primary role in engaging patients, in team coordination and supervision, in managing the complications associated with obesity and, in selected cases, in the decision for drug treatment or bariatric surgery, as possible more intensive, add-on interventions to lifestyle treatment.Entities:
Keywords: cognitive behavior therapy; lifestyle modification; multidisciplinary treatment; obesity
Year: 2016 PMID: 27013897 PMCID: PMC4777230 DOI: 10.2147/DMSO.S89836
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Metab Syndr Obes ISSN: 1178-7007 Impact factor: 3.168
Figure 1Constellation of factors associated with long-term weight loss maintenance in the general population of obese subjects attending nonsurgical weight loss programs.
Selection of the more relevant/recent trials analyzing factors associated with long-term weight loss maintenance
| Reference | Number of cases, and characteristics | Study design – follow-up | Results | Factors associated with WL maintenance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ryan et al | 5,145 following a WL program delivered over 4 years | RCT of intensive lifestyle intervention (ILI) vs diabetes support and education (DSE) – 8 years | At 8 years, ILI participants maintained 4.7% WL, vs 2.1% of DSE group | Having attended an ILI group, exercising, reducing calorie and fat intake and using meal replacements are correlated with greater WL maintenance |
| Torgerson et al | 3,305 obese participants included in a continuing education program | RCT of lifestyle + orlistat 120 mg tid or lifestyle + placebo – 4 years | Dietary counseling every 2 weeks for 6 months and monthly thereafter. Mean weight loss significantly greater with orlistat (5.8 vs 3.0 kg with placebo) | Adding orlistat to lifestyle changes increased WL and reduced weight regain |
| Dalle Grave et al | 1,944 obese participants enrolled by 24 obesity centers | Observational: 1,000 subjects contacted by phone – 3 years | 5% WL (63.7% of cases) associated with higher dietary restraint and lower disinhibition. The number of cases who achieved 5% WL higher in continuers (40.8%) vs dropouts (22.7%) | The dropouts satisfied with the results (7.0% of participants), and those confident to lose additional weight without professional help (11.7%) reported a larger WL than continuers |
| Wing et al | 314 individuals who had lost a mean of 19.3 kg in 2 years | RCT: newsletter group vs face-to-face intervention vs web-based group – 1.5 years | Weight regain significantly lower in the face-to-face group (2.5 kg) vs 4.7 kg in the Internet group and 4.9 kg in controls | Daily self-weighing associated with a decreased risk of weight regain |
| Svetkey et al | 1,032 individuals who had lost >4 kg during a WL program | RCT: self-directed control vs monthly personal contact vs access to an interactive technology- based intervention – 2.5 years | Personal-contact group regained less weight (4.0 kg) than self-directed group (5.5 kg). | Monthly brief personal contact associated with lower weight regain. Interactive technology- based intervention provides early but transient benefit |
| Perri et al | 234 individuals who lost a mean of 10 kg in the initial 6-month WL program | RCT of extended care (phone or face-to-face) vs control group – 1 year | Participants in the telephone and face-to-face groups regained less weight (1.3 and 1.2 kg, respectively) than those in the control group (3.7 kg) | Frequent telephone or face-to- face contact with a counselor associated with less weight regain |
| Kraschnewski et al | 14,306 randomly selected participants in the National survey | Retrospective observational – 1 year | 36.6, 17.3, 8.5, and 4.4% of participants reported long-term WL maintenance of at least 5, 10, 15, and 20%, respectively | Women, older adults (age, 75–84 years), non-Hispanic whites, and those with low education more frequently maintained WL; married individuals less frequently |
| Thomas et al | 2,886 subjects in the registry | Observational – 10 years | 88.4% and 86.6% of people maintained a WL of at least 10% at 5 and 10 years, respectively | Higher initial WL and duration of WL associated with maintenance. Decrease in leisure-time caloric expenditure, increase in % intake of calories from fat, disinhibition, restraint and self-weighing all associated with weight regain |
| Spark et al | 40 participants in an RCT of a phone WL program vs usual care. Extended care via messages | Patients received text message for the first 6 months, followed by a no-contact 12-month period – 1 year | There was a small but nonsignificant increase in weight during the extended contact intervention (1.3 kg), with weight remaining relatively stable vs the no-contact follow-up period (−0.1 kg) | Text message-delivered extended contact attenuates weight regain and promotes the maintenance of physical activity |
| Fuller et al | 171 of 739 individuals completing a 1-year WL program | RCT: commercial program (Weight Watchers) vs standard care – 1 year | During follow-up, both groups gained weight, but weight gain was significantly greater for the commercial vs the standard group (difference +2.0 kg) | Individuals achieving ≥10% WL at 24 months practiced more physical activity, but the difference was not statistically significant |
| Santos et al | 154 women following a 1-year WL program | RCT: 2 years of motivational intervention vs general education – 2 years | Average WL higher in the intervention group (−3 kg) than in the general education control group (−1 kg) | Body image, intrinsic motivation, exercise autonomous motivation significantly associated with WL maintenance |
| Anastasiou et al | Analysis of LOC (internals vs externals) in 239 WL maintainers (≥10%) vs regainers | Observational, cross-sectional – 2 years | WL more commonly associated with expert aid or drugs in externals. Maximum WL significantly higher for internals. | WL maintenance is associated with an internal LOC |
| Simpson et al | RCT: 170 individuals who lost ≥5% in the previous 12 months (feasibility trial) | RCT: high-intensity motivational intervention vs less intensive intervention vs usual care – 1 year | The mean weights in the highly intensive and the less intensive arms remained 2.8 kg and 0.7 kg lower than in controls. The participants in the intensive arm had a 43% higher chance of maintaining WL than controls | Intensive motivational interviewing may facilitate long- term weight maintenance |
| Young et al | 92 men who had experienced a 5% WL in 6 months | RCT: text messages or emails vs self-help control – 1 year | No differences in WL maintenance between the intervention and control groups at 6 or 12 months (1.5 kg mean between-group difference in weight regain at 12 months) | At 12 months, both the intervention and control groups had maintained medium-to-large increases in physical activity; dietary changes were less efficiently maintained |
Abbreviations: LOC, locus of control; RCT, randomized controlled trial; WL, weight loss.