| Literature DB >> 28239482 |
Flavio A Cadegiani1,2, Gustavo C Diniz2, Gabriella Alves2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The number of bariatric procedures has exponentially increased in the past decade, as a result of the lack of successful clinical weight-loss interventions. The main reasons for the failure of clinical obesity management are: (1) anti-obesity medications are administered as monotherapies (or pre-combined drugs); (2) lack of combination between pharmacotherapy and non-pharmacological modalities; (3) short duration of pharmacotherapy for obesity; (4) lack of weight-loss maintenance strategies; (5) misunderstanding of the complex pathophysiology of obesity; and (6) underprescription of anti-obesity medications. We developed a protocol that can potentially overcome the drawbacks that may lead to the failure of clinical therapy for obesity. The aim of this study is therefore to report the clinical and metabolic effects of our proposed obesity-management protocol over a 2-year period, and to determine whether this more intensive approach to obesity management is feasible and a possible alternative to bariatric surgery in patients with moderate-to-severe obesity.Entities:
Keywords: Bariatric surgery; Behavioral strategies; Dietary adherence; Exercise intervention; Liraglutide; Obesity; Pharmacologic therapy; SGLT2
Year: 2017 PMID: 28239482 PMCID: PMC5320647 DOI: 10.1186/s40608-017-0147-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Obes ISSN: 2052-9538
Fig. 1Guideline of pharmacotherapy intereventions against obesity
Fig. 2Finding the right moment to start the weaning-off process
Fig. 3Weaning-off steps
Fig. 4Management of the following steps of the discontinuation process according to the response to the initial weaning off intervention
Fig. 5Rescue therapy (in case of weight regain)
Pharmacotherapy
| MEDICATION | DOSAGE | ON- OR | NUMBER OF SUBJECTS (% OF TOTAL) | PARTIAL USE (NUMBER OF SUBJECTS) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LIRAGLUTIDE | 1.8 mg daily | Off-label (during the study period) | 39 (90.7%) | 1 < 6 months |
| SGLT2 INHIBITORS | Canagliflozin 300 mg daily | Off-label | 37 (86.0%) | 5 < 6 months |
| ORLISTAT | 120 mg B.I.D. | On-label | 34 (79.1%) | 4 < 6 months |
| METFORMIN | 2000 mg daily | Off-label | 28 (65.1%) | 2 < 6 months |
| BUPROPION + | 300 mg + 32 mg daily | On-label (USA) | 25 (58.1%) | 2 < 6 months |
| SIBUTRAMINE | 10-15 mg daily | On-label (Brazil) | 23 (53.5%) | 3 < 6 months |
| TOPIRAMATE | 100 mg daily | On-label (USA) | 13 (30.2%) | 4 < 6 months |
| TESTOSTERONE | 1000 mg I.M. every 3 months | On-label | 12 (27.9%) | - |
| FLUOXETINE | 20-60 mg daily | Off-label | 11 (25.6%) | 1 < 6 months |
| SERTRALINE | 50-200 mg daily | Off-label | 10 (23.3%) | 1 < 6 months |
Clinical responses to intervention
| Baseline | After intervention | Change | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Body weight (kg) | 121.6 | 90.3 | −31.3 (−25.7%; |
| BMI (kg/m2) | 43.08 | 31.99 | −11.09 (−25.7%; |
| Fat weight (kg) | 55.4 | 29.7 | −25.7 (−46.4%; |
| Total weight excess (kg) | 45.2 | 18.1 | −27.1 (−60.0%; |
| Waist circumference (cm) | 131.2 | 99.4 | −23.1 (−17.6%; |
| Visceral fat (cm2) | 263.8 | 101.0 | −162.8 (−57.9%; |
Fig. 6Goals achieved by patients
Metabolic findings after clinical intervention
| Baseline | After intervention | Change | |
|---|---|---|---|
| TG (mg/dL) | 177.4 | 81.0 | −96.4 (−54.3%; |
| LDL (mg/dL) | 118.1 | 98.8 | −19.3 (−26.3%; |
| ALT (U/L) | 52.9 | 27.8 | −25.1 (−47.4%; |
| GGT (mg/dL) | 47.8 | 15.2 | −32.6 (−68.2%; |
| Basal insulin (μIU/mL) | 23.1 | 7.9 | −15.2 (−65.8%; |
| Fasting glucose (mg/dL) | 91.4 | 77.5 | −13.9 (−15.2%; |
| HOMA-IR | 5.21 | 1.51 | −3.7 (−70.8%; |
| Uric acid (mg/dL) | 7.1 | 5.7 | −1.4 (−19.7%; |
| CRP (mg/L) | 0.73 | 0.39 | −0.34 (−46.6%; |
| HbA1c (%) | 5.87 | 5.15 | −0.72 (−13.6%; |
Fig. 7Previous paradigm on steps of obesity management
Fig. 8First and second steps of obesity management proposed by the present protocol: 1. Weight loss; and 2. Weight stabilization
Fig. 9Weight maintenance strategies to prevent weight regain