Real-world weight loss with meds approximates RCT results

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Patients who took a fixed-dose combination of phentermine and topiramate–extended release (ER) lost over 15% of their body weight at 12 months, according to real-world experience from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Dr. Gerardo Calderon

The results seen with the medication combo – a mean 15.5% total body weight loss at 12 months – bested the 8%-11% seen in randomized controlled trials (RCTs), said Gerardo Calderon, MD, in an interview during a poster session at Obesity Week, presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. The combination was also the most commonly prescribed weight loss medication at the Mayo Clinic, where Dr. Calderon is a gastroenterology and hepatology research fellow.

Patients taking lorcaserin at the Mayo Clinic also lost more weight loss than RCT participants (8.8% vs. 5%-6%, respectively). Notably, they also had a higher probability of losing at least 10% of their baseline total body weight (40% vs. 17%-23% in clinical trials). In RCTs, 37%-48% of patients taking phentermine/topiramate-ER had a total body weight loss of at least 10%, similar to the Mayo Clinic’s figure of 49%.

The rate of reported adverse events – 23.8% – exceeded that reported in RCTs, noted Dr. Calderon. Gastrointestinal symptoms, such as nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and constipation, were reported by 2%-20% of patients across the various drugs prescribed. Insomnia and mood changes, along with dizziness or lightheadedness, were reported by 2%-6% of patients. Almost 12% of patients taking phentermine/topiramate-SR reported paresthesias. No patients stopped taking their medication because of side effects, however.

The study was a review of patients seen at the Mayo Clinic during January 2016 – June 2018. Patients were included if they were prescribed weight loss medications and had a body mass index of at least 25 kg/m2 with comorbidities related to adiposity or with a BMI of at least 30 without such comorbidities. To be included, patients had to be followed for at least 3 months and see a Mayo Clinic physician at least twice.

Patients with previous bariatric surgery or other major gastrointestinal surgery, those who didn’t use their medications because of insurance problems or drug costs, and those who were on weight loss medication before being seen for the first time were excluded from the study.

Patients were a mean 49 years old, and most were female (86/118; 72.9%). Mean BMI at enrollment was 41.7, with a mean weight of 117.6 kg.

Of 118 patients, 76 (64.4%) had dyslipidemia. About half of patients reported obstructive sleep apnea, and the same amount had hypertension. About 40% had diabetes, and the same number had degenerative joint disease.

Phentermine/topiramate was prescribed the most frequently, with 43.2% of patients on this medication. Liraglutide was taken by 34.7% of patients, bupropion/naltrexone-SR by 16.1%, and lorcaserin by 5.9%.

Patients taking liraglutide had similar weight loss (7.1%) to that seen in RCTs (6%-8%). For this medication, the real-world Mayo Clinic experience showed less chance of hitting the 10% total body weight loss mark (12% vs. 26%-33% in RCTs).

For bupropion/naltrexone-SR, weight loss was similar among the Mayo Clinic patients (7.2%) and RCT participants (5%-8%), and probability of achieving at least 10% total body weight loss was similar as well (32% vs. 34%).

Weight loss medication was a component of a multidisciplinary weight loss approach at Mayo Clinic. Physicians, dietitians, and psychologists worked together to care for patients with overweight and obesity at his facility, Dr. Calderon said. Overall, patients were followed for a mean 6.7 months, and patients had a mean 3 follow-up visits, with over half of patients attending at least one follow-up appointment in study months 6-12. At 12 months, though, the attrition rate was 57.9%. “We notice an attrition rate of almost 60% at 1 year. People are not coming to their follow-up. ... Definitely, this is something we are concerned about, and we would like to bring these attrition rates lower,” he said.

Most patients (63.6%) saw a dietitian, but on average, patients had just one appointment. “At the Mayo Clinic, we provide dietitians and psychological support. But it’s up to the patients if they want to have it or not,” said Dr. Calderon. “Most of them, they just went once to a dietitian.”

“Overall, these outcomes are similar to those in RCTs and support the concept that weight loss medications can achieve clinically significant weight loss in a multidisciplinary weight loss program,” noted Dr. Calderon and his coauthors.

Dr. Calderon reported no outside sources of funding and no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Calderon G et al. Obesity Week, Abstract T-P-3425.

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Patients who took a fixed-dose combination of phentermine and topiramate–extended release (ER) lost over 15% of their body weight at 12 months, according to real-world experience from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Dr. Gerardo Calderon

The results seen with the medication combo – a mean 15.5% total body weight loss at 12 months – bested the 8%-11% seen in randomized controlled trials (RCTs), said Gerardo Calderon, MD, in an interview during a poster session at Obesity Week, presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. The combination was also the most commonly prescribed weight loss medication at the Mayo Clinic, where Dr. Calderon is a gastroenterology and hepatology research fellow.

Patients taking lorcaserin at the Mayo Clinic also lost more weight loss than RCT participants (8.8% vs. 5%-6%, respectively). Notably, they also had a higher probability of losing at least 10% of their baseline total body weight (40% vs. 17%-23% in clinical trials). In RCTs, 37%-48% of patients taking phentermine/topiramate-ER had a total body weight loss of at least 10%, similar to the Mayo Clinic’s figure of 49%.

The rate of reported adverse events – 23.8% – exceeded that reported in RCTs, noted Dr. Calderon. Gastrointestinal symptoms, such as nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and constipation, were reported by 2%-20% of patients across the various drugs prescribed. Insomnia and mood changes, along with dizziness or lightheadedness, were reported by 2%-6% of patients. Almost 12% of patients taking phentermine/topiramate-SR reported paresthesias. No patients stopped taking their medication because of side effects, however.

The study was a review of patients seen at the Mayo Clinic during January 2016 – June 2018. Patients were included if they were prescribed weight loss medications and had a body mass index of at least 25 kg/m2 with comorbidities related to adiposity or with a BMI of at least 30 without such comorbidities. To be included, patients had to be followed for at least 3 months and see a Mayo Clinic physician at least twice.

Patients with previous bariatric surgery or other major gastrointestinal surgery, those who didn’t use their medications because of insurance problems or drug costs, and those who were on weight loss medication before being seen for the first time were excluded from the study.

Patients were a mean 49 years old, and most were female (86/118; 72.9%). Mean BMI at enrollment was 41.7, with a mean weight of 117.6 kg.

Of 118 patients, 76 (64.4%) had dyslipidemia. About half of patients reported obstructive sleep apnea, and the same amount had hypertension. About 40% had diabetes, and the same number had degenerative joint disease.

Phentermine/topiramate was prescribed the most frequently, with 43.2% of patients on this medication. Liraglutide was taken by 34.7% of patients, bupropion/naltrexone-SR by 16.1%, and lorcaserin by 5.9%.

Patients taking liraglutide had similar weight loss (7.1%) to that seen in RCTs (6%-8%). For this medication, the real-world Mayo Clinic experience showed less chance of hitting the 10% total body weight loss mark (12% vs. 26%-33% in RCTs).

For bupropion/naltrexone-SR, weight loss was similar among the Mayo Clinic patients (7.2%) and RCT participants (5%-8%), and probability of achieving at least 10% total body weight loss was similar as well (32% vs. 34%).

Weight loss medication was a component of a multidisciplinary weight loss approach at Mayo Clinic. Physicians, dietitians, and psychologists worked together to care for patients with overweight and obesity at his facility, Dr. Calderon said. Overall, patients were followed for a mean 6.7 months, and patients had a mean 3 follow-up visits, with over half of patients attending at least one follow-up appointment in study months 6-12. At 12 months, though, the attrition rate was 57.9%. “We notice an attrition rate of almost 60% at 1 year. People are not coming to their follow-up. ... Definitely, this is something we are concerned about, and we would like to bring these attrition rates lower,” he said.

Most patients (63.6%) saw a dietitian, but on average, patients had just one appointment. “At the Mayo Clinic, we provide dietitians and psychological support. But it’s up to the patients if they want to have it or not,” said Dr. Calderon. “Most of them, they just went once to a dietitian.”

“Overall, these outcomes are similar to those in RCTs and support the concept that weight loss medications can achieve clinically significant weight loss in a multidisciplinary weight loss program,” noted Dr. Calderon and his coauthors.

Dr. Calderon reported no outside sources of funding and no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Calderon G et al. Obesity Week, Abstract T-P-3425.

Patients who took a fixed-dose combination of phentermine and topiramate–extended release (ER) lost over 15% of their body weight at 12 months, according to real-world experience from the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Dr. Gerardo Calderon

The results seen with the medication combo – a mean 15.5% total body weight loss at 12 months – bested the 8%-11% seen in randomized controlled trials (RCTs), said Gerardo Calderon, MD, in an interview during a poster session at Obesity Week, presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. The combination was also the most commonly prescribed weight loss medication at the Mayo Clinic, where Dr. Calderon is a gastroenterology and hepatology research fellow.

Patients taking lorcaserin at the Mayo Clinic also lost more weight loss than RCT participants (8.8% vs. 5%-6%, respectively). Notably, they also had a higher probability of losing at least 10% of their baseline total body weight (40% vs. 17%-23% in clinical trials). In RCTs, 37%-48% of patients taking phentermine/topiramate-ER had a total body weight loss of at least 10%, similar to the Mayo Clinic’s figure of 49%.

The rate of reported adverse events – 23.8% – exceeded that reported in RCTs, noted Dr. Calderon. Gastrointestinal symptoms, such as nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and constipation, were reported by 2%-20% of patients across the various drugs prescribed. Insomnia and mood changes, along with dizziness or lightheadedness, were reported by 2%-6% of patients. Almost 12% of patients taking phentermine/topiramate-SR reported paresthesias. No patients stopped taking their medication because of side effects, however.

The study was a review of patients seen at the Mayo Clinic during January 2016 – June 2018. Patients were included if they were prescribed weight loss medications and had a body mass index of at least 25 kg/m2 with comorbidities related to adiposity or with a BMI of at least 30 without such comorbidities. To be included, patients had to be followed for at least 3 months and see a Mayo Clinic physician at least twice.

Patients with previous bariatric surgery or other major gastrointestinal surgery, those who didn’t use their medications because of insurance problems or drug costs, and those who were on weight loss medication before being seen for the first time were excluded from the study.

Patients were a mean 49 years old, and most were female (86/118; 72.9%). Mean BMI at enrollment was 41.7, with a mean weight of 117.6 kg.

Of 118 patients, 76 (64.4%) had dyslipidemia. About half of patients reported obstructive sleep apnea, and the same amount had hypertension. About 40% had diabetes, and the same number had degenerative joint disease.

Phentermine/topiramate was prescribed the most frequently, with 43.2% of patients on this medication. Liraglutide was taken by 34.7% of patients, bupropion/naltrexone-SR by 16.1%, and lorcaserin by 5.9%.

Patients taking liraglutide had similar weight loss (7.1%) to that seen in RCTs (6%-8%). For this medication, the real-world Mayo Clinic experience showed less chance of hitting the 10% total body weight loss mark (12% vs. 26%-33% in RCTs).

For bupropion/naltrexone-SR, weight loss was similar among the Mayo Clinic patients (7.2%) and RCT participants (5%-8%), and probability of achieving at least 10% total body weight loss was similar as well (32% vs. 34%).

Weight loss medication was a component of a multidisciplinary weight loss approach at Mayo Clinic. Physicians, dietitians, and psychologists worked together to care for patients with overweight and obesity at his facility, Dr. Calderon said. Overall, patients were followed for a mean 6.7 months, and patients had a mean 3 follow-up visits, with over half of patients attending at least one follow-up appointment in study months 6-12. At 12 months, though, the attrition rate was 57.9%. “We notice an attrition rate of almost 60% at 1 year. People are not coming to their follow-up. ... Definitely, this is something we are concerned about, and we would like to bring these attrition rates lower,” he said.

Most patients (63.6%) saw a dietitian, but on average, patients had just one appointment. “At the Mayo Clinic, we provide dietitians and psychological support. But it’s up to the patients if they want to have it or not,” said Dr. Calderon. “Most of them, they just went once to a dietitian.”

“Overall, these outcomes are similar to those in RCTs and support the concept that weight loss medications can achieve clinically significant weight loss in a multidisciplinary weight loss program,” noted Dr. Calderon and his coauthors.

Dr. Calderon reported no outside sources of funding and no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Calderon G et al. Obesity Week, Abstract T-P-3425.

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Key clinical point: Patients taking weight loss medications saw real-world results comparable to those seen in RCTs

Major finding: Patients on phertermine-topiramate-ER lost over 15% of their body weight at 12 months.

Study details: Single-center retrospective cohort study of 188 patients taking weight loss medications.

Disclosures: The authors reported no conflicts of interest and no outside sources of funding.

Source: Calderon G et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-P-3425.

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For weight-loss apps, the evidence base is still small

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Digital apps for weight loss are ubiquitous, but do they work as a standalone intervention? So far, the evidence is scant, according to a new systematic review.

Beginning with a pool of 1,380 publications, Christina Hopkins and her colleagues at Duke University, Durham, N.C., eventually identified just nine trials of all-digital interventions for weight loss that met their inclusion criteria.

Presenting their findings at a late-breaking poster session during Obesity Week, presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery, Ms. Hopkins, a clinical psychology graduate student at Duke, and her colleagues found that three of the nine studies showed statistically significant weight loss, compared with a control state. Absolute weight loss in these three trials ranged from 3 kg to about 7 kg (between-group differences, P less than .001 for all).

Participants in another trial didn’t lose a statistically significant amount of weight, compared with the control arm of the study. However, the mean 5 kg lost by those in the intervention arm was enough to be clinically significant, so Ms. Hopkins and her colleagues included this study in a subanalysis that looked for effective modalities and interventions among the studies with significant results.

The duration of the studies ranged from 6 to 24 months, though five of the trials were less than 1 year long. Women made up the majority of participants in all but one trial.

“There is limited evidence that standalone digital weight-loss interventions produce clinically meaningful outcomes,” wrote Ms. Hopkins and her coauthors. “Absolute magnitude of weight loss was low, and the short intervention lengths call into question the sustainability of these weight losses.”

The systematic review cast a broad net to include digital modalities such as wireless scales, text messaging, email, and web-based interventions, as well as the use of smartphone apps and tracking devices. All interventions used multiple digital modalities.

The most frequently used technologies were the use of a website, used in six (67%) of the trials, followed by text messaging and smartphone apps, each used in five (56%) of the trials. Tracking devices, email, message boards, and gamification of some sort were all used in three (33%) of the trials.

In terms of the specific interventions used in the trials, weight, diet, and activity were all tracked in eight trials (89%). Similarly, all but one trial gave feedback and weight and health education to participants. Behavior change education, as well as calorie goals, were each used in six trials (67%).

Ms. Hopkins and her colleagues looked at which trials incorporated which modalities and interventions, finding that “trials that integrated components unique to digital interventions, such as gamification, podcasts, or interactive features, yielded significantly greater and more clinically meaningful weight losses.”

To be included in the systematic review, trials had to include adult participants with a body mass index of at least 25 kg/m2 and use a standalone digital intervention of at least 6 months’ duration. The primary outcome of interest in the review was the change in participant weight from baseline to the end of the minimum 6-month follow-up period. Randomized, controlled trials and feasibility trials were included, so long as participants were allocated randomly.

Of the 126 trials reviewed at the full text level, the most frequent reason for exclusion was the inclusion of human coaching. Also, 30 of the trials didn’t report weight change as an outcome, the investigators said.

Future directions should include comparing digital interventions that “utilize features unique to digital delivery” with those that more closely resemble in-person weight-loss management interventions, suggested Ms. Hopkins and her collaborators.

The authors reported no outside sources of funding and no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Hopkins C et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-P-LB-3640.

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Digital apps for weight loss are ubiquitous, but do they work as a standalone intervention? So far, the evidence is scant, according to a new systematic review.

Beginning with a pool of 1,380 publications, Christina Hopkins and her colleagues at Duke University, Durham, N.C., eventually identified just nine trials of all-digital interventions for weight loss that met their inclusion criteria.

Presenting their findings at a late-breaking poster session during Obesity Week, presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery, Ms. Hopkins, a clinical psychology graduate student at Duke, and her colleagues found that three of the nine studies showed statistically significant weight loss, compared with a control state. Absolute weight loss in these three trials ranged from 3 kg to about 7 kg (between-group differences, P less than .001 for all).

Participants in another trial didn’t lose a statistically significant amount of weight, compared with the control arm of the study. However, the mean 5 kg lost by those in the intervention arm was enough to be clinically significant, so Ms. Hopkins and her colleagues included this study in a subanalysis that looked for effective modalities and interventions among the studies with significant results.

The duration of the studies ranged from 6 to 24 months, though five of the trials were less than 1 year long. Women made up the majority of participants in all but one trial.

“There is limited evidence that standalone digital weight-loss interventions produce clinically meaningful outcomes,” wrote Ms. Hopkins and her coauthors. “Absolute magnitude of weight loss was low, and the short intervention lengths call into question the sustainability of these weight losses.”

The systematic review cast a broad net to include digital modalities such as wireless scales, text messaging, email, and web-based interventions, as well as the use of smartphone apps and tracking devices. All interventions used multiple digital modalities.

The most frequently used technologies were the use of a website, used in six (67%) of the trials, followed by text messaging and smartphone apps, each used in five (56%) of the trials. Tracking devices, email, message boards, and gamification of some sort were all used in three (33%) of the trials.

In terms of the specific interventions used in the trials, weight, diet, and activity were all tracked in eight trials (89%). Similarly, all but one trial gave feedback and weight and health education to participants. Behavior change education, as well as calorie goals, were each used in six trials (67%).

Ms. Hopkins and her colleagues looked at which trials incorporated which modalities and interventions, finding that “trials that integrated components unique to digital interventions, such as gamification, podcasts, or interactive features, yielded significantly greater and more clinically meaningful weight losses.”

To be included in the systematic review, trials had to include adult participants with a body mass index of at least 25 kg/m2 and use a standalone digital intervention of at least 6 months’ duration. The primary outcome of interest in the review was the change in participant weight from baseline to the end of the minimum 6-month follow-up period. Randomized, controlled trials and feasibility trials were included, so long as participants were allocated randomly.

Of the 126 trials reviewed at the full text level, the most frequent reason for exclusion was the inclusion of human coaching. Also, 30 of the trials didn’t report weight change as an outcome, the investigators said.

Future directions should include comparing digital interventions that “utilize features unique to digital delivery” with those that more closely resemble in-person weight-loss management interventions, suggested Ms. Hopkins and her collaborators.

The authors reported no outside sources of funding and no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Hopkins C et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-P-LB-3640.

 

Digital apps for weight loss are ubiquitous, but do they work as a standalone intervention? So far, the evidence is scant, according to a new systematic review.

Beginning with a pool of 1,380 publications, Christina Hopkins and her colleagues at Duke University, Durham, N.C., eventually identified just nine trials of all-digital interventions for weight loss that met their inclusion criteria.

Presenting their findings at a late-breaking poster session during Obesity Week, presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery, Ms. Hopkins, a clinical psychology graduate student at Duke, and her colleagues found that three of the nine studies showed statistically significant weight loss, compared with a control state. Absolute weight loss in these three trials ranged from 3 kg to about 7 kg (between-group differences, P less than .001 for all).

Participants in another trial didn’t lose a statistically significant amount of weight, compared with the control arm of the study. However, the mean 5 kg lost by those in the intervention arm was enough to be clinically significant, so Ms. Hopkins and her colleagues included this study in a subanalysis that looked for effective modalities and interventions among the studies with significant results.

The duration of the studies ranged from 6 to 24 months, though five of the trials were less than 1 year long. Women made up the majority of participants in all but one trial.

“There is limited evidence that standalone digital weight-loss interventions produce clinically meaningful outcomes,” wrote Ms. Hopkins and her coauthors. “Absolute magnitude of weight loss was low, and the short intervention lengths call into question the sustainability of these weight losses.”

The systematic review cast a broad net to include digital modalities such as wireless scales, text messaging, email, and web-based interventions, as well as the use of smartphone apps and tracking devices. All interventions used multiple digital modalities.

The most frequently used technologies were the use of a website, used in six (67%) of the trials, followed by text messaging and smartphone apps, each used in five (56%) of the trials. Tracking devices, email, message boards, and gamification of some sort were all used in three (33%) of the trials.

In terms of the specific interventions used in the trials, weight, diet, and activity were all tracked in eight trials (89%). Similarly, all but one trial gave feedback and weight and health education to participants. Behavior change education, as well as calorie goals, were each used in six trials (67%).

Ms. Hopkins and her colleagues looked at which trials incorporated which modalities and interventions, finding that “trials that integrated components unique to digital interventions, such as gamification, podcasts, or interactive features, yielded significantly greater and more clinically meaningful weight losses.”

To be included in the systematic review, trials had to include adult participants with a body mass index of at least 25 kg/m2 and use a standalone digital intervention of at least 6 months’ duration. The primary outcome of interest in the review was the change in participant weight from baseline to the end of the minimum 6-month follow-up period. Randomized, controlled trials and feasibility trials were included, so long as participants were allocated randomly.

Of the 126 trials reviewed at the full text level, the most frequent reason for exclusion was the inclusion of human coaching. Also, 30 of the trials didn’t report weight change as an outcome, the investigators said.

Future directions should include comparing digital interventions that “utilize features unique to digital delivery” with those that more closely resemble in-person weight-loss management interventions, suggested Ms. Hopkins and her collaborators.

The authors reported no outside sources of funding and no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Hopkins C et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-P-LB-3640.

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Key clinical point: Three of nine studies found statistically significant weight loss with digital interventions.

Major finding: The largest effect was seen in one study showing 7 kg of long-term weight loss (P less than .001).

Study details: A systematic review of nine studies of digital-only interventions for weight loss.

Disclosures: The authors reported no outside sources of funding and no conflicts of interest.

Source: Hopkins C et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-P-PB-3640.

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Heavy drinkers have a harder time keeping the weight off

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– Advising patients in a comprehensive weight loss intervention to moderate their alcohol consumption did not change how much they drank over the long term. At the same time, abstinent patients kept off more weight over time than those who were classified as heavy drinkers, in a new analysis of data from a multicenter trial.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Dr. Ariana Chao

Abstinent individuals lost just 1.6% more of their body weight after 4 years than those who drank (P = .003), a figure with “uncertain clinical significance,” Ariana Chao, PhD, said at the meeting presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. “The results should be taken in the context of the potential – though controversial – benefits of light to moderate alcohol consumption,” she added.

Alcohol contains 7.1 kcal/g, and “calories from alcohol usually add, rather than substitute, for food intake,” said Dr. Chao. Alcohol’s disinhibiting effects are thought to contribute to increased food intake and the making of less healthy food choices. However, existing research has shown inconsistent findings about the relationship between alcohol consumption and body weight, she said.

Reducing or completely cutting out alcoholic beverage consumption is common advice for those trying to lose weight, but whether this advice is followed, and whether it makes a difference over the long term, has been an open question, said Dr. Chao.

She and her collaborators at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, used data from Look AHEAD, “a multicenter, randomized, clinical trial that compared an intensive lifestyle intervention (ILI) to a diabetes support and education (DSE) control group,” for 5,145 people with overweight or obesity and type 2 diabetes, explained Dr. Chao and her coinvestigators.

Dr. Chao and her colleagues looked at the effect that the lifestyle intervention had on alcohol consumption. Additionally, to see how drinkers and nondrinkers fared over the long term, they examined the interaction between alcohol consumption and weight loss at year 4, hypothesizing that individuals who received ILI would have a greater decrease in their alcohol consumption by year 4 than those who received DSE. The investigators had a second hypothesis that, among the ILI cohort, greater alcohol consumption would be associated with less weight loss over the 4 years studied.

To measure alcohol consumption, participants completed a questionnaire at baseline and annually thereafter. The questionnaire asked whether participants had consumed any alcoholic beverages in the past week, and how many drinks per week of wine, beer, or liquor per week were typical for those who did consume alcohol.

Respondents were grouped into four categories according to their baseline alcohol consumption: nondrinkers, light drinkers (fewer than 7 drinks weekly for men and 4 for women), moderate drinkers (7-14 drinks weekly for men and 4-7 for women), and heavy drinkers (more than 14 drinks weekly for men and 7 for women).

At baseline, 38% of participants reported being abstinent from alcohol, and about 54% reported being light drinkers. Moderate drinkers made up 6%, and 2% reported falling into the heavy drinking category. Females were more likely than males to be nondrinkers.

Heavy drinkers took in significantly more calories than nondrinkers at baseline (2,397 versus 1,907 kcal/day; P less than .001).

Individuals who had consistently been heavy drinkers throughout the study lost less weight than any other group, dropping just 2.4% of their body weight at year 4, compared with their baseline weight. Those who were abstinent from alcohol fared the best, losing 5.1% of their initial body weight (P = .04 for difference). “Heavy drinking is a risk factor for suboptimal long-term weight loss,” said Dr. Chao.

Even those who were consistent light drinkers lost a bit less than those who were abstinent, keeping off 4.2% of their baseline body weight at 4 years (P = .04).

Look AHEAD included individuals aged 45-76 years with type 2 diabetes mellitus and a body mass index of at least 25 kg/m2, or 27 kg/m2 for those on insulin. Excluded were those with hemoglobin A1c of at least 11%, blood pressure of at least 160/100 mm Hg, and triglycerides over 600 mg/dL. A total of 4,901 patients had complete data available in the public access data set and were included in the present analysis. Dr. Chao and her colleagues used statistical techniques to adjust for baseline differences among participants.

The three-part ILI in Look AHEAD began by encouraging a low-calorie diet of 1,200-1,500 kcal/day for those weighing under 250 pounds, and 1,500-1,800 kcal/day for those who were heavier at baseline. Advice was to consume a balanced diet with less than 30% fat, less than 10% saturated fat, and at least 15% protein.

Patients were advised to strive for 10,000 steps per day, with 175 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise each week. Exercise was unsupervised.

Behavioral modification techniques included goal-setting, stimulus control, self-monitoring, and ideas for problem solving and relapse prevention. The intervention used motivational interviewing techniques.

With regard to alcohol, the ILI group was given information about the number of calories in various alcoholic beverages and advised to reduce the amount of alcohol consumed, in order to reduce calories.

The DSE group participated in three group sessions annually, and received general information about nutrition, exercise, and general support.

A potentially important limitation of the study was that alcohol consumption was assessed by self-report and a request for annual recall of typical drinking habits. An audience member from the United Kingdom commented that she found the overall rate of reported alcohol consumption to be “shockingly low,” compared with what her patients report drinking in England. The average United States resident drinks 2.3 gallons of alcohol, or 494 standard drinks, annually, according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, said Dr. Chao.

The midlife age range of participants, their diabetes diagnosis, and the fact that depressive symptoms were overall low limits generalizability of the findings, said Dr. Chao, adding that psychosocial factors, other health conditions, and current or past alcohol use disorder could also cause some residual confounding of the data.

Dr. Chao has received research support from Shire Pharmaceuticals.

SOURCE: Chao A et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-OR-2017.

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– Advising patients in a comprehensive weight loss intervention to moderate their alcohol consumption did not change how much they drank over the long term. At the same time, abstinent patients kept off more weight over time than those who were classified as heavy drinkers, in a new analysis of data from a multicenter trial.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Dr. Ariana Chao

Abstinent individuals lost just 1.6% more of their body weight after 4 years than those who drank (P = .003), a figure with “uncertain clinical significance,” Ariana Chao, PhD, said at the meeting presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. “The results should be taken in the context of the potential – though controversial – benefits of light to moderate alcohol consumption,” she added.

Alcohol contains 7.1 kcal/g, and “calories from alcohol usually add, rather than substitute, for food intake,” said Dr. Chao. Alcohol’s disinhibiting effects are thought to contribute to increased food intake and the making of less healthy food choices. However, existing research has shown inconsistent findings about the relationship between alcohol consumption and body weight, she said.

Reducing or completely cutting out alcoholic beverage consumption is common advice for those trying to lose weight, but whether this advice is followed, and whether it makes a difference over the long term, has been an open question, said Dr. Chao.

She and her collaborators at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, used data from Look AHEAD, “a multicenter, randomized, clinical trial that compared an intensive lifestyle intervention (ILI) to a diabetes support and education (DSE) control group,” for 5,145 people with overweight or obesity and type 2 diabetes, explained Dr. Chao and her coinvestigators.

Dr. Chao and her colleagues looked at the effect that the lifestyle intervention had on alcohol consumption. Additionally, to see how drinkers and nondrinkers fared over the long term, they examined the interaction between alcohol consumption and weight loss at year 4, hypothesizing that individuals who received ILI would have a greater decrease in their alcohol consumption by year 4 than those who received DSE. The investigators had a second hypothesis that, among the ILI cohort, greater alcohol consumption would be associated with less weight loss over the 4 years studied.

To measure alcohol consumption, participants completed a questionnaire at baseline and annually thereafter. The questionnaire asked whether participants had consumed any alcoholic beverages in the past week, and how many drinks per week of wine, beer, or liquor per week were typical for those who did consume alcohol.

Respondents were grouped into four categories according to their baseline alcohol consumption: nondrinkers, light drinkers (fewer than 7 drinks weekly for men and 4 for women), moderate drinkers (7-14 drinks weekly for men and 4-7 for women), and heavy drinkers (more than 14 drinks weekly for men and 7 for women).

At baseline, 38% of participants reported being abstinent from alcohol, and about 54% reported being light drinkers. Moderate drinkers made up 6%, and 2% reported falling into the heavy drinking category. Females were more likely than males to be nondrinkers.

Heavy drinkers took in significantly more calories than nondrinkers at baseline (2,397 versus 1,907 kcal/day; P less than .001).

Individuals who had consistently been heavy drinkers throughout the study lost less weight than any other group, dropping just 2.4% of their body weight at year 4, compared with their baseline weight. Those who were abstinent from alcohol fared the best, losing 5.1% of their initial body weight (P = .04 for difference). “Heavy drinking is a risk factor for suboptimal long-term weight loss,” said Dr. Chao.

Even those who were consistent light drinkers lost a bit less than those who were abstinent, keeping off 4.2% of their baseline body weight at 4 years (P = .04).

Look AHEAD included individuals aged 45-76 years with type 2 diabetes mellitus and a body mass index of at least 25 kg/m2, or 27 kg/m2 for those on insulin. Excluded were those with hemoglobin A1c of at least 11%, blood pressure of at least 160/100 mm Hg, and triglycerides over 600 mg/dL. A total of 4,901 patients had complete data available in the public access data set and were included in the present analysis. Dr. Chao and her colleagues used statistical techniques to adjust for baseline differences among participants.

The three-part ILI in Look AHEAD began by encouraging a low-calorie diet of 1,200-1,500 kcal/day for those weighing under 250 pounds, and 1,500-1,800 kcal/day for those who were heavier at baseline. Advice was to consume a balanced diet with less than 30% fat, less than 10% saturated fat, and at least 15% protein.

Patients were advised to strive for 10,000 steps per day, with 175 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise each week. Exercise was unsupervised.

Behavioral modification techniques included goal-setting, stimulus control, self-monitoring, and ideas for problem solving and relapse prevention. The intervention used motivational interviewing techniques.

With regard to alcohol, the ILI group was given information about the number of calories in various alcoholic beverages and advised to reduce the amount of alcohol consumed, in order to reduce calories.

The DSE group participated in three group sessions annually, and received general information about nutrition, exercise, and general support.

A potentially important limitation of the study was that alcohol consumption was assessed by self-report and a request for annual recall of typical drinking habits. An audience member from the United Kingdom commented that she found the overall rate of reported alcohol consumption to be “shockingly low,” compared with what her patients report drinking in England. The average United States resident drinks 2.3 gallons of alcohol, or 494 standard drinks, annually, according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, said Dr. Chao.

The midlife age range of participants, their diabetes diagnosis, and the fact that depressive symptoms were overall low limits generalizability of the findings, said Dr. Chao, adding that psychosocial factors, other health conditions, and current or past alcohol use disorder could also cause some residual confounding of the data.

Dr. Chao has received research support from Shire Pharmaceuticals.

SOURCE: Chao A et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-OR-2017.

 

– Advising patients in a comprehensive weight loss intervention to moderate their alcohol consumption did not change how much they drank over the long term. At the same time, abstinent patients kept off more weight over time than those who were classified as heavy drinkers, in a new analysis of data from a multicenter trial.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Dr. Ariana Chao

Abstinent individuals lost just 1.6% more of their body weight after 4 years than those who drank (P = .003), a figure with “uncertain clinical significance,” Ariana Chao, PhD, said at the meeting presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. “The results should be taken in the context of the potential – though controversial – benefits of light to moderate alcohol consumption,” she added.

Alcohol contains 7.1 kcal/g, and “calories from alcohol usually add, rather than substitute, for food intake,” said Dr. Chao. Alcohol’s disinhibiting effects are thought to contribute to increased food intake and the making of less healthy food choices. However, existing research has shown inconsistent findings about the relationship between alcohol consumption and body weight, she said.

Reducing or completely cutting out alcoholic beverage consumption is common advice for those trying to lose weight, but whether this advice is followed, and whether it makes a difference over the long term, has been an open question, said Dr. Chao.

She and her collaborators at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, used data from Look AHEAD, “a multicenter, randomized, clinical trial that compared an intensive lifestyle intervention (ILI) to a diabetes support and education (DSE) control group,” for 5,145 people with overweight or obesity and type 2 diabetes, explained Dr. Chao and her coinvestigators.

Dr. Chao and her colleagues looked at the effect that the lifestyle intervention had on alcohol consumption. Additionally, to see how drinkers and nondrinkers fared over the long term, they examined the interaction between alcohol consumption and weight loss at year 4, hypothesizing that individuals who received ILI would have a greater decrease in their alcohol consumption by year 4 than those who received DSE. The investigators had a second hypothesis that, among the ILI cohort, greater alcohol consumption would be associated with less weight loss over the 4 years studied.

To measure alcohol consumption, participants completed a questionnaire at baseline and annually thereafter. The questionnaire asked whether participants had consumed any alcoholic beverages in the past week, and how many drinks per week of wine, beer, or liquor per week were typical for those who did consume alcohol.

Respondents were grouped into four categories according to their baseline alcohol consumption: nondrinkers, light drinkers (fewer than 7 drinks weekly for men and 4 for women), moderate drinkers (7-14 drinks weekly for men and 4-7 for women), and heavy drinkers (more than 14 drinks weekly for men and 7 for women).

At baseline, 38% of participants reported being abstinent from alcohol, and about 54% reported being light drinkers. Moderate drinkers made up 6%, and 2% reported falling into the heavy drinking category. Females were more likely than males to be nondrinkers.

Heavy drinkers took in significantly more calories than nondrinkers at baseline (2,397 versus 1,907 kcal/day; P less than .001).

Individuals who had consistently been heavy drinkers throughout the study lost less weight than any other group, dropping just 2.4% of their body weight at year 4, compared with their baseline weight. Those who were abstinent from alcohol fared the best, losing 5.1% of their initial body weight (P = .04 for difference). “Heavy drinking is a risk factor for suboptimal long-term weight loss,” said Dr. Chao.

Even those who were consistent light drinkers lost a bit less than those who were abstinent, keeping off 4.2% of their baseline body weight at 4 years (P = .04).

Look AHEAD included individuals aged 45-76 years with type 2 diabetes mellitus and a body mass index of at least 25 kg/m2, or 27 kg/m2 for those on insulin. Excluded were those with hemoglobin A1c of at least 11%, blood pressure of at least 160/100 mm Hg, and triglycerides over 600 mg/dL. A total of 4,901 patients had complete data available in the public access data set and were included in the present analysis. Dr. Chao and her colleagues used statistical techniques to adjust for baseline differences among participants.

The three-part ILI in Look AHEAD began by encouraging a low-calorie diet of 1,200-1,500 kcal/day for those weighing under 250 pounds, and 1,500-1,800 kcal/day for those who were heavier at baseline. Advice was to consume a balanced diet with less than 30% fat, less than 10% saturated fat, and at least 15% protein.

Patients were advised to strive for 10,000 steps per day, with 175 minutes of moderate-intensity exercise each week. Exercise was unsupervised.

Behavioral modification techniques included goal-setting, stimulus control, self-monitoring, and ideas for problem solving and relapse prevention. The intervention used motivational interviewing techniques.

With regard to alcohol, the ILI group was given information about the number of calories in various alcoholic beverages and advised to reduce the amount of alcohol consumed, in order to reduce calories.

The DSE group participated in three group sessions annually, and received general information about nutrition, exercise, and general support.

A potentially important limitation of the study was that alcohol consumption was assessed by self-report and a request for annual recall of typical drinking habits. An audience member from the United Kingdom commented that she found the overall rate of reported alcohol consumption to be “shockingly low,” compared with what her patients report drinking in England. The average United States resident drinks 2.3 gallons of alcohol, or 494 standard drinks, annually, according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, said Dr. Chao.

The midlife age range of participants, their diabetes diagnosis, and the fact that depressive symptoms were overall low limits generalizability of the findings, said Dr. Chao, adding that psychosocial factors, other health conditions, and current or past alcohol use disorder could also cause some residual confounding of the data.

Dr. Chao has received research support from Shire Pharmaceuticals.

SOURCE: Chao A et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-OR-2017.

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Key clinical point: After 4 years of an intervention program, heavy drinkers had the smallest net loss in body weight.

Major finding: Heavy drinkers kept off less than half as much weight as teetotalers (2.4% versus 5.1% of baseline weight, P = .04).

Study details: Analysis of public data from Look AHEAD, a multicenter randomized trial of intensive lifestyle intervention for weight loss that enrolled 5,145 people.

Disclosures: Dr. Chao reported receiving research funding from Shire Pharmaceuticals.

Source: Chao A et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-OR-2017.

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Weight loss medications may have a role after bariatric surgery

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Is there a role for weight loss medications to help manage weight regain after bariatric surgery? Perhaps, according to a recent analysis of single-center clinical data.

Dr. Nawfal W. Istfan

Phentermine and topiramate were each prescribed to between 10% and 12.5% of bariatric surgery patients at Boston Medical Center in recent years. That figure had been steadily increasing since 2004, when data collection began, Nawfal W. Istfan, MD, PhD, said at the meeting presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

However, the center didn’t know how patients who had received medication fared for long-term maintenance of weight loss, compared with those who had surgery alone; also, there were no clinical guidelines for prescribing weight loss medications (WLMs). “Have we done those patients any benefit by prescribing weight loss medications after gastric bypass surgery?” asked Dr. Istfan. The answer from the Boston Medical Center data is a qualified “yes;” patients with the highest rates of weight regain who were adherent to their medication did see lower rates of regain, and fewer rapid weight regain events.

Comparing patients who received prescriptions with those who did not, patients with less weight loss at nadir were more likely to receive a prescription. “This could very well be the reason they were prescribed a medication: They did not lose as much weight, and they are more likely to ask us” for WLMs, said Dr. Istfan, an endocrinologist at Boston University. However, for those who were prescribed WLMs, the slope of regain was flatter than for those who didn’t receive medication. Of the 626 patients included in the study, 91 received phentermine alone, 54 topiramate alone, and 113 were prescribed both phentermine and topiramate. Three received lorcaserin.

Those receiving medication were similar to the total bariatric surgery population in terms of age, sex, comorbidities, socioeconomic status, and preoperative body mass index, said Dr. Istfan, the senior author in the study. However, Hispanic individuals were more likely to receive WLMs, he said.

Recognizing that “the ratio of weight regain to nadir weight is more indicative of overfeeding than other parameters,” Dr. Istfan said that he and his colleagues divided patients into quartiles of regain, based on this ratio. The quartiles fell out so that those who had the least regain either lost weight or regained less than 1.4%, to make up the first quartile. The second quartile included those who regained from 1.5% to 6.26%, while the third quartile ranged up to 14.29% regain. Those who regained 14.3% or more were in the highest quartile of weight regain.

In comparing characteristics of the quartiles, there were more African Americans in the two higher quartiles (P = .017). More patients had achieved maximal weight loss in the highest quartile of regain (P less than .0001), though preoperative BMI had also been higher in this group (P = .0008).

After statistical adjustment, the investigators found that for individuals who had the highest quartile of regain, patients who were adherent to their WLMs had significantly less weight regain than those who took no medication (P = .014). However, patients considered nonadherent saw no medication effect on weight regain. The differences were small overall, with adherent patients regaining about 27% of weight relative to their nadir and those who didn’t take WLMs regaining about 30%. These significant results were seen long after bariatric surgery, at about 7 years post surgery.

In another analysis that looked just at the quartile of patients with the highest regain rate, weight regain was significantly delayed among those who were prescribed – and were adherent to – WLMs (P = .023). The analysis used a threshold weight regain rate of 1.22% per month; levels lower than that did not see a significant drug effect, and the effect was not seen for those not adherent to their WLMs.

Finally, an adjusted statistical analysis compared those taking and not taking WLMs to see whether WLMs were effective at preventing weight regain in rolling 90-day intervals throughout the study period. Again, in the highest quartile, those who were adherent to WLMs had a lower odds ratio of hitting the 1.22%/month regain rate, compared with those not taking medication (OR, 0.570; 95% confidence interval, 0.371-0.877; P = .01). The effect was not significant for the nonadherent group (OR, 0.872; 95% CI, 0.593-1.284; P = .489).

As more bariatric procedures are being done, and as more patients are living with their surgeries, physicians are seeing more weight regain, said Dr. Istfan, noting that it’s important to assess efficacy of WLMs in the postsurgical population. “Recent work showed that by 5 years after gastric bypass, half of patients had regained more than 15% of their nadir weight, and two-thirds of patients had regained more than 20% of their total maximum weight loss, said Dr. Istfan (King WC et al. JAMA.2018;320:1560).

Typically, patients will see about a 35% weight loss at their nadir, with a gradual increase in weight gain beginning about 2 years after surgery. Though it’s true that a net weight loss of 25% is still good, it can be a misleading way to look at the data, “because it does not focus on the process of weight regain itself,” said Dr. Istfan.

“Despite the maintenance of substantial weight loss, weight regain is concerning: It’s the present and future, not the past,” he said.

Regaining weight necessarily means that patients are having excess nutrient intake and a net-positive energy balance; this state can be associated with oxidative stress, inflammation, and insulin resistance – all potential contributors to the recurrence of comorbidities.

What’s to be done about weight regain, if it’s a point of concern? One option, said Dr. Istfan, is to consider more surgery. Patients might want a “re-do;” techniques that have been tried include reshaping the pouch and doing an anastomosis plication. If a gastro-gastric fistula’s developed, that can be corrected, he said.

Some factors influencing regain can be targeted by behavioral therapy. These include addressing alcohol consumption, discouraging grazing, encouraging exercise, and assessing and modifying diet quality in general.

“There is a general reluctance on the part of physicians to use weight loss medications after bariatric surgery,” said Dr. Istfan. Reasons can include concern about further nutritional compromise, especially when thinking about long-term use of appetite-suppressing medications. Importantly, there aren’t clinical guidelines for prescribing WLMs after bariatric surgery, nor is there a strong body of prospective studies in this area.

Dr. Istfan noted that the medical and surgical bariatric teams collaborate closely at Boston Medical Center to provide pre- and postoperative assessment and management.

The long observational interval and ethnic and socioeconomic diversity of the study population are strengths, said Dr. Istfan. Also, the three different multivariable models converged to similar findings.

However, the study was retrospective, with some confounding likely, and each prescriber involved in the study may have varying prescribing practices. Also, adherence was assessed by follow-up medication appointments, a measure that likely introduced some inaccuracy.

“Weight loss medications are potentially effective tools to counter weight regain after bariatric surgery; prospective studies are needed to optimize the use of weight loss medications after bariatric surgery,” said Dr. Istfan.

Dr. Istfan reported no outside sources of funding, and no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Anderson W et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-OR-2016.

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Is there a role for weight loss medications to help manage weight regain after bariatric surgery? Perhaps, according to a recent analysis of single-center clinical data.

Dr. Nawfal W. Istfan

Phentermine and topiramate were each prescribed to between 10% and 12.5% of bariatric surgery patients at Boston Medical Center in recent years. That figure had been steadily increasing since 2004, when data collection began, Nawfal W. Istfan, MD, PhD, said at the meeting presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

However, the center didn’t know how patients who had received medication fared for long-term maintenance of weight loss, compared with those who had surgery alone; also, there were no clinical guidelines for prescribing weight loss medications (WLMs). “Have we done those patients any benefit by prescribing weight loss medications after gastric bypass surgery?” asked Dr. Istfan. The answer from the Boston Medical Center data is a qualified “yes;” patients with the highest rates of weight regain who were adherent to their medication did see lower rates of regain, and fewer rapid weight regain events.

Comparing patients who received prescriptions with those who did not, patients with less weight loss at nadir were more likely to receive a prescription. “This could very well be the reason they were prescribed a medication: They did not lose as much weight, and they are more likely to ask us” for WLMs, said Dr. Istfan, an endocrinologist at Boston University. However, for those who were prescribed WLMs, the slope of regain was flatter than for those who didn’t receive medication. Of the 626 patients included in the study, 91 received phentermine alone, 54 topiramate alone, and 113 were prescribed both phentermine and topiramate. Three received lorcaserin.

Those receiving medication were similar to the total bariatric surgery population in terms of age, sex, comorbidities, socioeconomic status, and preoperative body mass index, said Dr. Istfan, the senior author in the study. However, Hispanic individuals were more likely to receive WLMs, he said.

Recognizing that “the ratio of weight regain to nadir weight is more indicative of overfeeding than other parameters,” Dr. Istfan said that he and his colleagues divided patients into quartiles of regain, based on this ratio. The quartiles fell out so that those who had the least regain either lost weight or regained less than 1.4%, to make up the first quartile. The second quartile included those who regained from 1.5% to 6.26%, while the third quartile ranged up to 14.29% regain. Those who regained 14.3% or more were in the highest quartile of weight regain.

In comparing characteristics of the quartiles, there were more African Americans in the two higher quartiles (P = .017). More patients had achieved maximal weight loss in the highest quartile of regain (P less than .0001), though preoperative BMI had also been higher in this group (P = .0008).

After statistical adjustment, the investigators found that for individuals who had the highest quartile of regain, patients who were adherent to their WLMs had significantly less weight regain than those who took no medication (P = .014). However, patients considered nonadherent saw no medication effect on weight regain. The differences were small overall, with adherent patients regaining about 27% of weight relative to their nadir and those who didn’t take WLMs regaining about 30%. These significant results were seen long after bariatric surgery, at about 7 years post surgery.

In another analysis that looked just at the quartile of patients with the highest regain rate, weight regain was significantly delayed among those who were prescribed – and were adherent to – WLMs (P = .023). The analysis used a threshold weight regain rate of 1.22% per month; levels lower than that did not see a significant drug effect, and the effect was not seen for those not adherent to their WLMs.

Finally, an adjusted statistical analysis compared those taking and not taking WLMs to see whether WLMs were effective at preventing weight regain in rolling 90-day intervals throughout the study period. Again, in the highest quartile, those who were adherent to WLMs had a lower odds ratio of hitting the 1.22%/month regain rate, compared with those not taking medication (OR, 0.570; 95% confidence interval, 0.371-0.877; P = .01). The effect was not significant for the nonadherent group (OR, 0.872; 95% CI, 0.593-1.284; P = .489).

As more bariatric procedures are being done, and as more patients are living with their surgeries, physicians are seeing more weight regain, said Dr. Istfan, noting that it’s important to assess efficacy of WLMs in the postsurgical population. “Recent work showed that by 5 years after gastric bypass, half of patients had regained more than 15% of their nadir weight, and two-thirds of patients had regained more than 20% of their total maximum weight loss, said Dr. Istfan (King WC et al. JAMA.2018;320:1560).

Typically, patients will see about a 35% weight loss at their nadir, with a gradual increase in weight gain beginning about 2 years after surgery. Though it’s true that a net weight loss of 25% is still good, it can be a misleading way to look at the data, “because it does not focus on the process of weight regain itself,” said Dr. Istfan.

“Despite the maintenance of substantial weight loss, weight regain is concerning: It’s the present and future, not the past,” he said.

Regaining weight necessarily means that patients are having excess nutrient intake and a net-positive energy balance; this state can be associated with oxidative stress, inflammation, and insulin resistance – all potential contributors to the recurrence of comorbidities.

What’s to be done about weight regain, if it’s a point of concern? One option, said Dr. Istfan, is to consider more surgery. Patients might want a “re-do;” techniques that have been tried include reshaping the pouch and doing an anastomosis plication. If a gastro-gastric fistula’s developed, that can be corrected, he said.

Some factors influencing regain can be targeted by behavioral therapy. These include addressing alcohol consumption, discouraging grazing, encouraging exercise, and assessing and modifying diet quality in general.

“There is a general reluctance on the part of physicians to use weight loss medications after bariatric surgery,” said Dr. Istfan. Reasons can include concern about further nutritional compromise, especially when thinking about long-term use of appetite-suppressing medications. Importantly, there aren’t clinical guidelines for prescribing WLMs after bariatric surgery, nor is there a strong body of prospective studies in this area.

Dr. Istfan noted that the medical and surgical bariatric teams collaborate closely at Boston Medical Center to provide pre- and postoperative assessment and management.

The long observational interval and ethnic and socioeconomic diversity of the study population are strengths, said Dr. Istfan. Also, the three different multivariable models converged to similar findings.

However, the study was retrospective, with some confounding likely, and each prescriber involved in the study may have varying prescribing practices. Also, adherence was assessed by follow-up medication appointments, a measure that likely introduced some inaccuracy.

“Weight loss medications are potentially effective tools to counter weight regain after bariatric surgery; prospective studies are needed to optimize the use of weight loss medications after bariatric surgery,” said Dr. Istfan.

Dr. Istfan reported no outside sources of funding, and no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Anderson W et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-OR-2016.

 

Is there a role for weight loss medications to help manage weight regain after bariatric surgery? Perhaps, according to a recent analysis of single-center clinical data.

Dr. Nawfal W. Istfan

Phentermine and topiramate were each prescribed to between 10% and 12.5% of bariatric surgery patients at Boston Medical Center in recent years. That figure had been steadily increasing since 2004, when data collection began, Nawfal W. Istfan, MD, PhD, said at the meeting presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

However, the center didn’t know how patients who had received medication fared for long-term maintenance of weight loss, compared with those who had surgery alone; also, there were no clinical guidelines for prescribing weight loss medications (WLMs). “Have we done those patients any benefit by prescribing weight loss medications after gastric bypass surgery?” asked Dr. Istfan. The answer from the Boston Medical Center data is a qualified “yes;” patients with the highest rates of weight regain who were adherent to their medication did see lower rates of regain, and fewer rapid weight regain events.

Comparing patients who received prescriptions with those who did not, patients with less weight loss at nadir were more likely to receive a prescription. “This could very well be the reason they were prescribed a medication: They did not lose as much weight, and they are more likely to ask us” for WLMs, said Dr. Istfan, an endocrinologist at Boston University. However, for those who were prescribed WLMs, the slope of regain was flatter than for those who didn’t receive medication. Of the 626 patients included in the study, 91 received phentermine alone, 54 topiramate alone, and 113 were prescribed both phentermine and topiramate. Three received lorcaserin.

Those receiving medication were similar to the total bariatric surgery population in terms of age, sex, comorbidities, socioeconomic status, and preoperative body mass index, said Dr. Istfan, the senior author in the study. However, Hispanic individuals were more likely to receive WLMs, he said.

Recognizing that “the ratio of weight regain to nadir weight is more indicative of overfeeding than other parameters,” Dr. Istfan said that he and his colleagues divided patients into quartiles of regain, based on this ratio. The quartiles fell out so that those who had the least regain either lost weight or regained less than 1.4%, to make up the first quartile. The second quartile included those who regained from 1.5% to 6.26%, while the third quartile ranged up to 14.29% regain. Those who regained 14.3% or more were in the highest quartile of weight regain.

In comparing characteristics of the quartiles, there were more African Americans in the two higher quartiles (P = .017). More patients had achieved maximal weight loss in the highest quartile of regain (P less than .0001), though preoperative BMI had also been higher in this group (P = .0008).

After statistical adjustment, the investigators found that for individuals who had the highest quartile of regain, patients who were adherent to their WLMs had significantly less weight regain than those who took no medication (P = .014). However, patients considered nonadherent saw no medication effect on weight regain. The differences were small overall, with adherent patients regaining about 27% of weight relative to their nadir and those who didn’t take WLMs regaining about 30%. These significant results were seen long after bariatric surgery, at about 7 years post surgery.

In another analysis that looked just at the quartile of patients with the highest regain rate, weight regain was significantly delayed among those who were prescribed – and were adherent to – WLMs (P = .023). The analysis used a threshold weight regain rate of 1.22% per month; levels lower than that did not see a significant drug effect, and the effect was not seen for those not adherent to their WLMs.

Finally, an adjusted statistical analysis compared those taking and not taking WLMs to see whether WLMs were effective at preventing weight regain in rolling 90-day intervals throughout the study period. Again, in the highest quartile, those who were adherent to WLMs had a lower odds ratio of hitting the 1.22%/month regain rate, compared with those not taking medication (OR, 0.570; 95% confidence interval, 0.371-0.877; P = .01). The effect was not significant for the nonadherent group (OR, 0.872; 95% CI, 0.593-1.284; P = .489).

As more bariatric procedures are being done, and as more patients are living with their surgeries, physicians are seeing more weight regain, said Dr. Istfan, noting that it’s important to assess efficacy of WLMs in the postsurgical population. “Recent work showed that by 5 years after gastric bypass, half of patients had regained more than 15% of their nadir weight, and two-thirds of patients had regained more than 20% of their total maximum weight loss, said Dr. Istfan (King WC et al. JAMA.2018;320:1560).

Typically, patients will see about a 35% weight loss at their nadir, with a gradual increase in weight gain beginning about 2 years after surgery. Though it’s true that a net weight loss of 25% is still good, it can be a misleading way to look at the data, “because it does not focus on the process of weight regain itself,” said Dr. Istfan.

“Despite the maintenance of substantial weight loss, weight regain is concerning: It’s the present and future, not the past,” he said.

Regaining weight necessarily means that patients are having excess nutrient intake and a net-positive energy balance; this state can be associated with oxidative stress, inflammation, and insulin resistance – all potential contributors to the recurrence of comorbidities.

What’s to be done about weight regain, if it’s a point of concern? One option, said Dr. Istfan, is to consider more surgery. Patients might want a “re-do;” techniques that have been tried include reshaping the pouch and doing an anastomosis plication. If a gastro-gastric fistula’s developed, that can be corrected, he said.

Some factors influencing regain can be targeted by behavioral therapy. These include addressing alcohol consumption, discouraging grazing, encouraging exercise, and assessing and modifying diet quality in general.

“There is a general reluctance on the part of physicians to use weight loss medications after bariatric surgery,” said Dr. Istfan. Reasons can include concern about further nutritional compromise, especially when thinking about long-term use of appetite-suppressing medications. Importantly, there aren’t clinical guidelines for prescribing WLMs after bariatric surgery, nor is there a strong body of prospective studies in this area.

Dr. Istfan noted that the medical and surgical bariatric teams collaborate closely at Boston Medical Center to provide pre- and postoperative assessment and management.

The long observational interval and ethnic and socioeconomic diversity of the study population are strengths, said Dr. Istfan. Also, the three different multivariable models converged to similar findings.

However, the study was retrospective, with some confounding likely, and each prescriber involved in the study may have varying prescribing practices. Also, adherence was assessed by follow-up medication appointments, a measure that likely introduced some inaccuracy.

“Weight loss medications are potentially effective tools to counter weight regain after bariatric surgery; prospective studies are needed to optimize the use of weight loss medications after bariatric surgery,” said Dr. Istfan.

Dr. Istfan reported no outside sources of funding, and no conflicts of interest.

SOURCE: Anderson W et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-OR-2016.

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Key clinical point: Weight loss medication flattened the curve of weight regain after bariatric surgery – for some patients.

Major finding: Weight loss medicine reduced regain among those who had the most weight regain (P =.014).

Study details: Retrospective single-center cohort study of 626 bariatric surgery patients.

Disclosures: The study authors reported no external sources of funding. Dr. Istfan reported no conflicts of interest.

Source: Anderson W et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-OR-2016.

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Weight loss medications may have a role after bariatric surgery

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Thu, 12/13/2018 - 16:39

 

Is there a role for weight loss medications to help manage weight regain after bariatric surgery? Perhaps, according to a recent analysis of single-center clinical data.

Dr. Nawfal W. Istfan

Phentermine and topiramate were each prescribed to between 10% and 12.5% of bariatric surgery patients at Boston Medical Center in recent years. That figure had been steadily increasing since 2004, when data collection began, Nawfal W. Istfan, MD, PhD, said at the meeting presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

However, the center didn’t know how patients who had received medication fared for long-term maintenance of weight loss, compared with those who had surgery alone; also, there were no clinical guidelines for prescribing weight loss medications (WLMs). “Have we done those patients any benefit by prescribing weight loss medications after gastric bypass surgery?” asked Dr. Istfan. The answer from the Boston Medical Center data is a qualified “yes;” patients with the highest rates of weight regain who were adherent to their medication did see lower rates of regain, and fewer rapid weight regain events.

Comparing patients who received prescriptions with those who did not, patients with less weight loss at nadir were more likely to receive a prescription. “This could very well be the reason they were prescribed a medication: They did not lose as much weight, and they are more likely to ask us” for WLMs, said Dr. Istfan, an endocrinologist at Boston University. However, for those who were prescribed WLMs, the slope of regain was flatter than for those who didn’t receive medication. Of the 626 patients included in the study, 91 received phentermine alone, 54 topiramate alone, and 113 were prescribed both phentermine and topiramate. Three received lorcaserin.

Those receiving medication were similar to the total bariatric surgery population in terms of age, sex, comorbidities, socioeconomic status, and preoperative body mass index, said Dr. Istfan, the senior author in the study. However, Hispanic individuals were more likely to receive WLMs, he said.

Recognizing that “the ratio of weight regain to nadir weight is more indicative of overfeeding than other parameters,” Dr. Istfan said that he and his colleagues divided patients into quartiles of regain, based on this ratio. The quartiles fell out so that those who had the least regain either lost weight or regained less than 1.4%, to make up the first quartile. The second quartile included those who regained from 1.5% to 6.26%, while the third quartile ranged up to 14.29% regain. Those who regained 14.3% or more were in the highest quartile of weight regain.

In comparing characteristics of the quartiles, there were more African Americans in the two higher quartiles (P = .017). More patients had achieved maximal weight loss in the highest quartile of regain (P less than .0001), though preoperative BMI had also been higher in this group (P = .0008).

After statistical adjustment, the investigators found that for individuals who had the highest quartile of regain, patients who were adherent to their WLMs had significantly less weight regain than those who took no medication (P = .014). However, patients considered nonadherent saw no medication effect on weight regain. The differences were small overall, with adherent patients regaining about 27% of weight relative to their nadir and those who didn’t take WLMs regaining about 30%. These significant results were seen long after bariatric surgery, at about 7 years post surgery.

In another analysis that looked just at the quartile of patients with the highest regain rate, weight regain was significantly delayed among those who were prescribed – and were adherent to – WLMs (P = .023). The analysis used a threshold weight regain rate of 1.22% per month; levels lower than that did not see a significant drug effect, and the effect was not seen for those not adherent to their WLMs.

Finally, an adjusted statistical analysis compared those taking and not taking WLMs to see whether WLMs were effective at preventing weight regain in rolling 90-day intervals throughout the study period. Again, in the highest quartile, those who were adherent to WLMs had a lower odds ratio of hitting the 1.22%/month regain rate, compared with those not taking medication (OR, 0.570; 95% confidence interval, 0.371-0.877; P = .01). The effect was not significant for the nonadherent group (OR, 0.872; 95% CI, 0.593-1.284; P = .489).

As more bariatric procedures are being done, and as more patients are living with their surgeries, physicians are seeing more weight regain, said Dr. Istfan, noting that it’s important to assess efficacy of WLMs in the postsurgical population. “Recent work showed that by 5 years after gastric bypass, half of patients had regained more than 15% of their nadir weight, and two-thirds of patients had regained more than 20% of their total maximum weight loss, said Dr. Istfan (King WC et al. JAMA.2018;320:1560).

Typically, patients will see about a 35% weight loss at their nadir, with a gradual increase in weight gain beginning about 2 years after surgery. Though it’s true that a net weight loss of 25% is still good, it can be a misleading way to look at the data, “because it does not focus on the process of weight regain itself,” said Dr. Istfan.

“Despite the maintenance of substantial weight loss, weight regain is concerning: It’s the present and future, not the past,” he said.

Regaining weight necessarily means that patients are having excess nutrient intake and a net-positive energy balance; this state can be associated with oxidative stress, inflammation, and insulin resistance – all potential contributors to the recurrence of comorbidities.

What’s to be done about weight regain, if it’s a point of concern? One option, said Dr. Istfan, is to consider more surgery. Patients might want a “re-do;” techniques that have been tried include reshaping the pouch and doing an anastomosis plication. If a gastro-gastric fistula’s developed, that can be corrected, he said.

Some factors influencing regain can be targeted by behavioral therapy. These include addressing alcohol consumption, discouraging grazing, encouraging exercise, and assessing and modifying diet quality in general.

“There is a general reluctance on the part of physicians to use weight loss medications after bariatric surgery,” said Dr. Istfan. Reasons can include concern about further nutritional compromise, especially when thinking about long-term use of appetite-suppressing medications. Importantly, there aren’t clinical guidelines for prescribing WLMs after bariatric surgery, nor is there a strong body of prospective studies in this area.

Dr. Istfan noted that the medical and surgical bariatric teams collaborate closely at Boston Medical Center to provide pre- and postoperative assessment and management.

The long observational interval and ethnic and socioeconomic diversity of the study population are strengths, said Dr. Istfan. Also, the three different multivariable models converged to similar findings.

However, the study was retrospective, with some confounding likely, and each prescriber involved in the study may have varying prescribing practices. Also, adherence was assessed by follow-up medication appointments, a measure that likely introduced some inaccuracy.

“Weight loss medications are potentially effective tools to counter weight regain after bariatric surgery; prospective studies are needed to optimize the use of weight loss medications after bariatric surgery,” said Dr. Istfan.

Dr. Istfan reported no outside sources of funding, and no conflicts of interest.

AGA provides GIs with a comprehensive, multi-disciplinary process to guide and personalize innovative obesity care for safe and effective weight management. Learn more at http://ow.ly/fFA330mWKCn.

SOURCE: Anderson W et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-OR-2016.

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Is there a role for weight loss medications to help manage weight regain after bariatric surgery? Perhaps, according to a recent analysis of single-center clinical data.

Dr. Nawfal W. Istfan

Phentermine and topiramate were each prescribed to between 10% and 12.5% of bariatric surgery patients at Boston Medical Center in recent years. That figure had been steadily increasing since 2004, when data collection began, Nawfal W. Istfan, MD, PhD, said at the meeting presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

However, the center didn’t know how patients who had received medication fared for long-term maintenance of weight loss, compared with those who had surgery alone; also, there were no clinical guidelines for prescribing weight loss medications (WLMs). “Have we done those patients any benefit by prescribing weight loss medications after gastric bypass surgery?” asked Dr. Istfan. The answer from the Boston Medical Center data is a qualified “yes;” patients with the highest rates of weight regain who were adherent to their medication did see lower rates of regain, and fewer rapid weight regain events.

Comparing patients who received prescriptions with those who did not, patients with less weight loss at nadir were more likely to receive a prescription. “This could very well be the reason they were prescribed a medication: They did not lose as much weight, and they are more likely to ask us” for WLMs, said Dr. Istfan, an endocrinologist at Boston University. However, for those who were prescribed WLMs, the slope of regain was flatter than for those who didn’t receive medication. Of the 626 patients included in the study, 91 received phentermine alone, 54 topiramate alone, and 113 were prescribed both phentermine and topiramate. Three received lorcaserin.

Those receiving medication were similar to the total bariatric surgery population in terms of age, sex, comorbidities, socioeconomic status, and preoperative body mass index, said Dr. Istfan, the senior author in the study. However, Hispanic individuals were more likely to receive WLMs, he said.

Recognizing that “the ratio of weight regain to nadir weight is more indicative of overfeeding than other parameters,” Dr. Istfan said that he and his colleagues divided patients into quartiles of regain, based on this ratio. The quartiles fell out so that those who had the least regain either lost weight or regained less than 1.4%, to make up the first quartile. The second quartile included those who regained from 1.5% to 6.26%, while the third quartile ranged up to 14.29% regain. Those who regained 14.3% or more were in the highest quartile of weight regain.

In comparing characteristics of the quartiles, there were more African Americans in the two higher quartiles (P = .017). More patients had achieved maximal weight loss in the highest quartile of regain (P less than .0001), though preoperative BMI had also been higher in this group (P = .0008).

After statistical adjustment, the investigators found that for individuals who had the highest quartile of regain, patients who were adherent to their WLMs had significantly less weight regain than those who took no medication (P = .014). However, patients considered nonadherent saw no medication effect on weight regain. The differences were small overall, with adherent patients regaining about 27% of weight relative to their nadir and those who didn’t take WLMs regaining about 30%. These significant results were seen long after bariatric surgery, at about 7 years post surgery.

In another analysis that looked just at the quartile of patients with the highest regain rate, weight regain was significantly delayed among those who were prescribed – and were adherent to – WLMs (P = .023). The analysis used a threshold weight regain rate of 1.22% per month; levels lower than that did not see a significant drug effect, and the effect was not seen for those not adherent to their WLMs.

Finally, an adjusted statistical analysis compared those taking and not taking WLMs to see whether WLMs were effective at preventing weight regain in rolling 90-day intervals throughout the study period. Again, in the highest quartile, those who were adherent to WLMs had a lower odds ratio of hitting the 1.22%/month regain rate, compared with those not taking medication (OR, 0.570; 95% confidence interval, 0.371-0.877; P = .01). The effect was not significant for the nonadherent group (OR, 0.872; 95% CI, 0.593-1.284; P = .489).

As more bariatric procedures are being done, and as more patients are living with their surgeries, physicians are seeing more weight regain, said Dr. Istfan, noting that it’s important to assess efficacy of WLMs in the postsurgical population. “Recent work showed that by 5 years after gastric bypass, half of patients had regained more than 15% of their nadir weight, and two-thirds of patients had regained more than 20% of their total maximum weight loss, said Dr. Istfan (King WC et al. JAMA.2018;320:1560).

Typically, patients will see about a 35% weight loss at their nadir, with a gradual increase in weight gain beginning about 2 years after surgery. Though it’s true that a net weight loss of 25% is still good, it can be a misleading way to look at the data, “because it does not focus on the process of weight regain itself,” said Dr. Istfan.

“Despite the maintenance of substantial weight loss, weight regain is concerning: It’s the present and future, not the past,” he said.

Regaining weight necessarily means that patients are having excess nutrient intake and a net-positive energy balance; this state can be associated with oxidative stress, inflammation, and insulin resistance – all potential contributors to the recurrence of comorbidities.

What’s to be done about weight regain, if it’s a point of concern? One option, said Dr. Istfan, is to consider more surgery. Patients might want a “re-do;” techniques that have been tried include reshaping the pouch and doing an anastomosis plication. If a gastro-gastric fistula’s developed, that can be corrected, he said.

Some factors influencing regain can be targeted by behavioral therapy. These include addressing alcohol consumption, discouraging grazing, encouraging exercise, and assessing and modifying diet quality in general.

“There is a general reluctance on the part of physicians to use weight loss medications after bariatric surgery,” said Dr. Istfan. Reasons can include concern about further nutritional compromise, especially when thinking about long-term use of appetite-suppressing medications. Importantly, there aren’t clinical guidelines for prescribing WLMs after bariatric surgery, nor is there a strong body of prospective studies in this area.

Dr. Istfan noted that the medical and surgical bariatric teams collaborate closely at Boston Medical Center to provide pre- and postoperative assessment and management.

The long observational interval and ethnic and socioeconomic diversity of the study population are strengths, said Dr. Istfan. Also, the three different multivariable models converged to similar findings.

However, the study was retrospective, with some confounding likely, and each prescriber involved in the study may have varying prescribing practices. Also, adherence was assessed by follow-up medication appointments, a measure that likely introduced some inaccuracy.

“Weight loss medications are potentially effective tools to counter weight regain after bariatric surgery; prospective studies are needed to optimize the use of weight loss medications after bariatric surgery,” said Dr. Istfan.

Dr. Istfan reported no outside sources of funding, and no conflicts of interest.

AGA provides GIs with a comprehensive, multi-disciplinary process to guide and personalize innovative obesity care for safe and effective weight management. Learn more at http://ow.ly/fFA330mWKCn.

SOURCE: Anderson W et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-OR-2016.

 

Is there a role for weight loss medications to help manage weight regain after bariatric surgery? Perhaps, according to a recent analysis of single-center clinical data.

Dr. Nawfal W. Istfan

Phentermine and topiramate were each prescribed to between 10% and 12.5% of bariatric surgery patients at Boston Medical Center in recent years. That figure had been steadily increasing since 2004, when data collection began, Nawfal W. Istfan, MD, PhD, said at the meeting presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

However, the center didn’t know how patients who had received medication fared for long-term maintenance of weight loss, compared with those who had surgery alone; also, there were no clinical guidelines for prescribing weight loss medications (WLMs). “Have we done those patients any benefit by prescribing weight loss medications after gastric bypass surgery?” asked Dr. Istfan. The answer from the Boston Medical Center data is a qualified “yes;” patients with the highest rates of weight regain who were adherent to their medication did see lower rates of regain, and fewer rapid weight regain events.

Comparing patients who received prescriptions with those who did not, patients with less weight loss at nadir were more likely to receive a prescription. “This could very well be the reason they were prescribed a medication: They did not lose as much weight, and they are more likely to ask us” for WLMs, said Dr. Istfan, an endocrinologist at Boston University. However, for those who were prescribed WLMs, the slope of regain was flatter than for those who didn’t receive medication. Of the 626 patients included in the study, 91 received phentermine alone, 54 topiramate alone, and 113 were prescribed both phentermine and topiramate. Three received lorcaserin.

Those receiving medication were similar to the total bariatric surgery population in terms of age, sex, comorbidities, socioeconomic status, and preoperative body mass index, said Dr. Istfan, the senior author in the study. However, Hispanic individuals were more likely to receive WLMs, he said.

Recognizing that “the ratio of weight regain to nadir weight is more indicative of overfeeding than other parameters,” Dr. Istfan said that he and his colleagues divided patients into quartiles of regain, based on this ratio. The quartiles fell out so that those who had the least regain either lost weight or regained less than 1.4%, to make up the first quartile. The second quartile included those who regained from 1.5% to 6.26%, while the third quartile ranged up to 14.29% regain. Those who regained 14.3% or more were in the highest quartile of weight regain.

In comparing characteristics of the quartiles, there were more African Americans in the two higher quartiles (P = .017). More patients had achieved maximal weight loss in the highest quartile of regain (P less than .0001), though preoperative BMI had also been higher in this group (P = .0008).

After statistical adjustment, the investigators found that for individuals who had the highest quartile of regain, patients who were adherent to their WLMs had significantly less weight regain than those who took no medication (P = .014). However, patients considered nonadherent saw no medication effect on weight regain. The differences were small overall, with adherent patients regaining about 27% of weight relative to their nadir and those who didn’t take WLMs regaining about 30%. These significant results were seen long after bariatric surgery, at about 7 years post surgery.

In another analysis that looked just at the quartile of patients with the highest regain rate, weight regain was significantly delayed among those who were prescribed – and were adherent to – WLMs (P = .023). The analysis used a threshold weight regain rate of 1.22% per month; levels lower than that did not see a significant drug effect, and the effect was not seen for those not adherent to their WLMs.

Finally, an adjusted statistical analysis compared those taking and not taking WLMs to see whether WLMs were effective at preventing weight regain in rolling 90-day intervals throughout the study period. Again, in the highest quartile, those who were adherent to WLMs had a lower odds ratio of hitting the 1.22%/month regain rate, compared with those not taking medication (OR, 0.570; 95% confidence interval, 0.371-0.877; P = .01). The effect was not significant for the nonadherent group (OR, 0.872; 95% CI, 0.593-1.284; P = .489).

As more bariatric procedures are being done, and as more patients are living with their surgeries, physicians are seeing more weight regain, said Dr. Istfan, noting that it’s important to assess efficacy of WLMs in the postsurgical population. “Recent work showed that by 5 years after gastric bypass, half of patients had regained more than 15% of their nadir weight, and two-thirds of patients had regained more than 20% of their total maximum weight loss, said Dr. Istfan (King WC et al. JAMA.2018;320:1560).

Typically, patients will see about a 35% weight loss at their nadir, with a gradual increase in weight gain beginning about 2 years after surgery. Though it’s true that a net weight loss of 25% is still good, it can be a misleading way to look at the data, “because it does not focus on the process of weight regain itself,” said Dr. Istfan.

“Despite the maintenance of substantial weight loss, weight regain is concerning: It’s the present and future, not the past,” he said.

Regaining weight necessarily means that patients are having excess nutrient intake and a net-positive energy balance; this state can be associated with oxidative stress, inflammation, and insulin resistance – all potential contributors to the recurrence of comorbidities.

What’s to be done about weight regain, if it’s a point of concern? One option, said Dr. Istfan, is to consider more surgery. Patients might want a “re-do;” techniques that have been tried include reshaping the pouch and doing an anastomosis plication. If a gastro-gastric fistula’s developed, that can be corrected, he said.

Some factors influencing regain can be targeted by behavioral therapy. These include addressing alcohol consumption, discouraging grazing, encouraging exercise, and assessing and modifying diet quality in general.

“There is a general reluctance on the part of physicians to use weight loss medications after bariatric surgery,” said Dr. Istfan. Reasons can include concern about further nutritional compromise, especially when thinking about long-term use of appetite-suppressing medications. Importantly, there aren’t clinical guidelines for prescribing WLMs after bariatric surgery, nor is there a strong body of prospective studies in this area.

Dr. Istfan noted that the medical and surgical bariatric teams collaborate closely at Boston Medical Center to provide pre- and postoperative assessment and management.

The long observational interval and ethnic and socioeconomic diversity of the study population are strengths, said Dr. Istfan. Also, the three different multivariable models converged to similar findings.

However, the study was retrospective, with some confounding likely, and each prescriber involved in the study may have varying prescribing practices. Also, adherence was assessed by follow-up medication appointments, a measure that likely introduced some inaccuracy.

“Weight loss medications are potentially effective tools to counter weight regain after bariatric surgery; prospective studies are needed to optimize the use of weight loss medications after bariatric surgery,” said Dr. Istfan.

Dr. Istfan reported no outside sources of funding, and no conflicts of interest.

AGA provides GIs with a comprehensive, multi-disciplinary process to guide and personalize innovative obesity care for safe and effective weight management. Learn more at http://ow.ly/fFA330mWKCn.

SOURCE: Anderson W et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-OR-2016.

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Key clinical point: Weight loss medication flattened the curve of weight regain after bariatric surgery – for some patients.

Major finding: Weight loss medicine reduced regain among those who had the most weight regain (P =.014).

Study details: Retrospective single-center cohort study of 626 bariatric surgery patients.

Disclosures: The study authors reported no external sources of funding. Dr. Istfan reported no conflicts of interest.

Source: Anderson W et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-OR-2016.

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Obesity meds used by just over half of pediatric obesity programs

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Only about half of pediatric obesity programs offer pharmacotherapy, according to data from a national program registry.

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Programs that didn’t offer pharmacotherapy for children and adolescents with obesity cited a variety of reasons in responses to a survey of 33 multicomponent pediatric weight management programs (PWMPs).

Simply not being in favor of using pharmacotherapy for obesity treatment was the most frequently cited reason, named by seven PWMPs that didn’t prescribe obesity medications.

The second most common response to the survey, cited by six programs, was a lack of knowledge about prescribing medications for obesity, and concerns about insurance coverage were noted by five programs, said Claudia Fox, MD, and her colleagues in a poster presentation at a meeting presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. “Despite recommendations, few youth with severe obesity are treated with medications.”

Of the programs that did offer pharmacotherapy, 14 prescribed topiramate, and 13 prescribed phentermine. Metformin was used by 11 programs, and orlistat by eight. Six programs prescribed the fixed-dose combination of topiramate and phentermine.

Lorcaserin, naltrexone/bupropion, liraglutide, phendimetrazine, and naltrexone alone all were used by fewer than five programs each.

The national Pediatric Obesity Weight Evaluation Registry (POWER) “was established in 2013 to identify and promote effective intervention strategies for pediatric obesity,” wrote Dr. Fox and her colleagues

Of the 33 POWER PWMPs who were invited to participate, 30 completed a program profile survey. Of these, 16 programs (53%) offered pharmacotherapy, wrote Dr. Fox, the codirector of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Pediatric Obesity Medicine, Minneapolis, and her colleagues in the POWER work group.

In addition to not being in favor of prescribing obesity medication for pediatric patients, lack of knowledge, and insurance concerns, one program cited limited outcome studies for pediatric obesity pharmacotherapy. One other program’s response noted that patients couldn’t be seen frequently enough to assess the safety of obesity medications.

Taken together, the POWER sites had 7,880 patients. Just 5% were aged 2- 5 years, 48% were aged 6-11 years, and 47% were aged 12-18 years. Just over half (53%) were female.

At baseline, about a quarter of patients (26.4%) had class 1 obesity, defined as a body mass index of at least the 95th age- and sex-adjusted percentile. Children and adolescents with class 2 obesity (BMI of at least 1.2-1.4 times the 95th percentile) made up 35.3% of patients; 38.3% had class 3 obesity, with BMIs greater than 1.4 times the 95th percentile.

In 2017, the Endocrine Society published updated clinical practice guidelines for the assessment, treatment, and prevention of pediatric obesity (J Clin Endocrin Metab. 2017 Mar;102:3;709-57). The guidelines for pediatric obesity treatment recommend intensive lifestyle modifications including dietary, physical activity, and behavioral interventions. Pharmacotherapy is suggested “only after a formal program of intensive lifestyle modification has failed to limit weight gain or to ameliorate comorbidities.” Additionally, say the guidelines, Food and Drug Administration–approved pharmacotherapy should be used only “with a concomitant lifestyle modification program of the highest intensity available and only by clinicians who are experienced in the use of anti-obesity agents and are aware of the potential for adverse reactions.”

“Most commonly prescribed medications are not FDA approved for indication of obesity in pediatrics,” noted Dr. Fox and her coauthors. “Further research is needed to evaluate efficacy of pharmacotherapy in the pediatric population and to understand factors impacting prescribing practices.”

Dr. Fox reported no outside sources of funding and had no relevant financial disclosures.

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Only about half of pediatric obesity programs offer pharmacotherapy, according to data from a national program registry.

PhotoDisk

Programs that didn’t offer pharmacotherapy for children and adolescents with obesity cited a variety of reasons in responses to a survey of 33 multicomponent pediatric weight management programs (PWMPs).

Simply not being in favor of using pharmacotherapy for obesity treatment was the most frequently cited reason, named by seven PWMPs that didn’t prescribe obesity medications.

The second most common response to the survey, cited by six programs, was a lack of knowledge about prescribing medications for obesity, and concerns about insurance coverage were noted by five programs, said Claudia Fox, MD, and her colleagues in a poster presentation at a meeting presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. “Despite recommendations, few youth with severe obesity are treated with medications.”

Of the programs that did offer pharmacotherapy, 14 prescribed topiramate, and 13 prescribed phentermine. Metformin was used by 11 programs, and orlistat by eight. Six programs prescribed the fixed-dose combination of topiramate and phentermine.

Lorcaserin, naltrexone/bupropion, liraglutide, phendimetrazine, and naltrexone alone all were used by fewer than five programs each.

The national Pediatric Obesity Weight Evaluation Registry (POWER) “was established in 2013 to identify and promote effective intervention strategies for pediatric obesity,” wrote Dr. Fox and her colleagues

Of the 33 POWER PWMPs who were invited to participate, 30 completed a program profile survey. Of these, 16 programs (53%) offered pharmacotherapy, wrote Dr. Fox, the codirector of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Pediatric Obesity Medicine, Minneapolis, and her colleagues in the POWER work group.

In addition to not being in favor of prescribing obesity medication for pediatric patients, lack of knowledge, and insurance concerns, one program cited limited outcome studies for pediatric obesity pharmacotherapy. One other program’s response noted that patients couldn’t be seen frequently enough to assess the safety of obesity medications.

Taken together, the POWER sites had 7,880 patients. Just 5% were aged 2- 5 years, 48% were aged 6-11 years, and 47% were aged 12-18 years. Just over half (53%) were female.

At baseline, about a quarter of patients (26.4%) had class 1 obesity, defined as a body mass index of at least the 95th age- and sex-adjusted percentile. Children and adolescents with class 2 obesity (BMI of at least 1.2-1.4 times the 95th percentile) made up 35.3% of patients; 38.3% had class 3 obesity, with BMIs greater than 1.4 times the 95th percentile.

In 2017, the Endocrine Society published updated clinical practice guidelines for the assessment, treatment, and prevention of pediatric obesity (J Clin Endocrin Metab. 2017 Mar;102:3;709-57). The guidelines for pediatric obesity treatment recommend intensive lifestyle modifications including dietary, physical activity, and behavioral interventions. Pharmacotherapy is suggested “only after a formal program of intensive lifestyle modification has failed to limit weight gain or to ameliorate comorbidities.” Additionally, say the guidelines, Food and Drug Administration–approved pharmacotherapy should be used only “with a concomitant lifestyle modification program of the highest intensity available and only by clinicians who are experienced in the use of anti-obesity agents and are aware of the potential for adverse reactions.”

“Most commonly prescribed medications are not FDA approved for indication of obesity in pediatrics,” noted Dr. Fox and her coauthors. “Further research is needed to evaluate efficacy of pharmacotherapy in the pediatric population and to understand factors impacting prescribing practices.”

Dr. Fox reported no outside sources of funding and had no relevant financial disclosures.

 

Only about half of pediatric obesity programs offer pharmacotherapy, according to data from a national program registry.

PhotoDisk

Programs that didn’t offer pharmacotherapy for children and adolescents with obesity cited a variety of reasons in responses to a survey of 33 multicomponent pediatric weight management programs (PWMPs).

Simply not being in favor of using pharmacotherapy for obesity treatment was the most frequently cited reason, named by seven PWMPs that didn’t prescribe obesity medications.

The second most common response to the survey, cited by six programs, was a lack of knowledge about prescribing medications for obesity, and concerns about insurance coverage were noted by five programs, said Claudia Fox, MD, and her colleagues in a poster presentation at a meeting presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery. “Despite recommendations, few youth with severe obesity are treated with medications.”

Of the programs that did offer pharmacotherapy, 14 prescribed topiramate, and 13 prescribed phentermine. Metformin was used by 11 programs, and orlistat by eight. Six programs prescribed the fixed-dose combination of topiramate and phentermine.

Lorcaserin, naltrexone/bupropion, liraglutide, phendimetrazine, and naltrexone alone all were used by fewer than five programs each.

The national Pediatric Obesity Weight Evaluation Registry (POWER) “was established in 2013 to identify and promote effective intervention strategies for pediatric obesity,” wrote Dr. Fox and her colleagues

Of the 33 POWER PWMPs who were invited to participate, 30 completed a program profile survey. Of these, 16 programs (53%) offered pharmacotherapy, wrote Dr. Fox, the codirector of the University of Minnesota’s Center for Pediatric Obesity Medicine, Minneapolis, and her colleagues in the POWER work group.

In addition to not being in favor of prescribing obesity medication for pediatric patients, lack of knowledge, and insurance concerns, one program cited limited outcome studies for pediatric obesity pharmacotherapy. One other program’s response noted that patients couldn’t be seen frequently enough to assess the safety of obesity medications.

Taken together, the POWER sites had 7,880 patients. Just 5% were aged 2- 5 years, 48% were aged 6-11 years, and 47% were aged 12-18 years. Just over half (53%) were female.

At baseline, about a quarter of patients (26.4%) had class 1 obesity, defined as a body mass index of at least the 95th age- and sex-adjusted percentile. Children and adolescents with class 2 obesity (BMI of at least 1.2-1.4 times the 95th percentile) made up 35.3% of patients; 38.3% had class 3 obesity, with BMIs greater than 1.4 times the 95th percentile.

In 2017, the Endocrine Society published updated clinical practice guidelines for the assessment, treatment, and prevention of pediatric obesity (J Clin Endocrin Metab. 2017 Mar;102:3;709-57). The guidelines for pediatric obesity treatment recommend intensive lifestyle modifications including dietary, physical activity, and behavioral interventions. Pharmacotherapy is suggested “only after a formal program of intensive lifestyle modification has failed to limit weight gain or to ameliorate comorbidities.” Additionally, say the guidelines, Food and Drug Administration–approved pharmacotherapy should be used only “with a concomitant lifestyle modification program of the highest intensity available and only by clinicians who are experienced in the use of anti-obesity agents and are aware of the potential for adverse reactions.”

“Most commonly prescribed medications are not FDA approved for indication of obesity in pediatrics,” noted Dr. Fox and her coauthors. “Further research is needed to evaluate efficacy of pharmacotherapy in the pediatric population and to understand factors impacting prescribing practices.”

Dr. Fox reported no outside sources of funding and had no relevant financial disclosures.

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REPORTING FROM OBESITY WEEK 2018

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Key clinical point: Just over half of pediatric weight management programs prescribed obesity medications.

Major finding: Of 30 programs responding, 16 (53%) prescribed obesity medication.

Study details: Survey of 33 programs in the Pediatric Obesity Weight Evaluation Registry (POWER).

Disclosures: Dr. Fox reported no outside sources of funding and no conflicts of interest.
 

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True postbariatric hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia is rare

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– True post–bariatric surgery hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia is rare among bariatric surgery patients, based on a decade’s worth of experience from the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Dr. Tiffany Cortes

Of 2,386 patients who had bariatric surgery at Mayo, 60 (2.6%) had a postsurgical diagnosis code associated with hypoglycemia in their medical record. However, just five of them (0.25%) had documentation meeting the criteria for Whipple’s Triad, which consists of low blood glucose levels, symptoms associated with the low glucose levels, and symptom resolution when glucose levels are corrected, Tiffany Cortes, MD, reported in an oral presentation at Obesity Week, which is presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery .

“Postbariatric hypoglycemia is an infrequent occurrence among patients who present with suspicious symptoms,” said Dr. Cortes, an endocrinology fellow at the clinic.

Post–bariatric surgery hypoglycemia is characterized by neuroglycopenia with a documented plasma glucose of less than 54 mg/dL with symptom resolution after a rise in glucose levels; neuroglycopenia that occurs 1-3 hours after a meal; and symptom onset more than 6 months after bariatric surgery, said Dr. Cortes.

Previous work had found that the overall prevalence of post–bariatric surgery hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia ranged from 17%-34%, with severe symptoms seen in fewer than 1% of surgery recipients.

Bariatric surgery, especially Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB), may result in wide postprandial blood glucose excursions, with a spike occurring about 30 minutes after eating. For symptomatic individuals, this postprandial glucose peak will prompt an insulin surge followed by a rapid and steep decline in serum glucose.

Looking at Mayo Clinic medical records from mid-2008 to the end of 2017, Dr. Cortes and her colleagues wanted to determine the prevalence of hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia in the bariatric surgery population.

Additionally, the researchers wanted to see how patients who presented with symptoms suspicious for the syndrome were evaluated and to understand the efficacy of treatments.

Patients who had a diagnosis of type 1 diabetes mellitus and those who were on insulin or sulfonylureas were excluded from the retrospective chart review.

Of the 60 patients evaluated in the endocrinology clinic for symptoms suspicious for hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia, 51 (85%) were female, and 14 had a diagnosis of diabetes before surgery. Mean patient age at surgery was 43 years.

These symptomatic patients had a mean presurgical body mass index (BMI) of 42.8 kg/m2 (range, 38.6-49.3 kg/m2). Their mean time to maximal weight loss was 1.3 years after surgery, with symptoms beginning at 1.4 years after surgery. Patients lost a mean 37.4% of their body mass to reach a mean nadir BMI of 26.2.

Overall, about two-thirds of the surgeries performed were RYGB. Of patients with hypoglycemic symptoms, 73.3% had an RYGB. Revision of gastric bypass was the next most common surgery, at 21.8% overall; these patients constituted 15% of the hypoglycemic symptom group.

Of the patients with symptoms, 80% noted symptoms only after eating, with half of patients describing symptoms coming on 1-3 hours after eating. A little over a third of the patients didn’t describe the exact timing of symptoms.

Just 20 patients had a complete hypoglycemia work up bundle documented in their medical record, said Dr. Cortes. This consisted of measures of serum glucose, insulin, and C-peptide levels. Of the 20 patients, 5 met Whipple’s Triad criteria, and 4 of these patients received a diagnosis of hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia.

Two patients had a 72-hour fast, and neither of them met diagnostic criteria. Seventeen patients had a mixed meal tolerance test, with one individual meeting diagnostic criteria for and receiving a diagnosis of hypoinsulinemic hyperglycemia.

Of the five patients meeting diagnostic criteria (0.20% of surgical population), all had received RYGB, and two had previous weight loss procedures, said Dr. Cortes. For four of the patients, the surgical indication was weight loss; the other patient had an indication of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD).

“Dietary interventions are the most effective treatment” for post–bariatric surgery hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia in the Mayo Clinic experience, said Dr. Cortes.

Turning to the investigators’ examination of treatment recommendations for the 60 patients who reported hypoglycemic symptoms, most (95%) received an initial recommendation to manage symptoms by diet changes.

Most patients (77%) had at least one follow-up visit, with over half of these patients (61%) reporting improvement in symptoms, and seven patients (16%) reporting resolution. Twelve patients (27%) either remained the same or had not had a recurrence of symptoms.

Medication was prescribed for 12 patients; of them, 8 received the alpha glucosidase inhibitor acarbose and 7 responded, according to the record review. No one reported worsening of symptoms on acarbose.

Other individual patients were prescribed octreotide alone, or octreotide, pasireotide, or diazoxide in combination with acarbose, with variable results.

Dr. Cortes reported no conflicts of interest and no external sources of funding.

SOURCE: Cortes T et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-OR-2015.

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– True post–bariatric surgery hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia is rare among bariatric surgery patients, based on a decade’s worth of experience from the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Dr. Tiffany Cortes

Of 2,386 patients who had bariatric surgery at Mayo, 60 (2.6%) had a postsurgical diagnosis code associated with hypoglycemia in their medical record. However, just five of them (0.25%) had documentation meeting the criteria for Whipple’s Triad, which consists of low blood glucose levels, symptoms associated with the low glucose levels, and symptom resolution when glucose levels are corrected, Tiffany Cortes, MD, reported in an oral presentation at Obesity Week, which is presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery .

“Postbariatric hypoglycemia is an infrequent occurrence among patients who present with suspicious symptoms,” said Dr. Cortes, an endocrinology fellow at the clinic.

Post–bariatric surgery hypoglycemia is characterized by neuroglycopenia with a documented plasma glucose of less than 54 mg/dL with symptom resolution after a rise in glucose levels; neuroglycopenia that occurs 1-3 hours after a meal; and symptom onset more than 6 months after bariatric surgery, said Dr. Cortes.

Previous work had found that the overall prevalence of post–bariatric surgery hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia ranged from 17%-34%, with severe symptoms seen in fewer than 1% of surgery recipients.

Bariatric surgery, especially Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB), may result in wide postprandial blood glucose excursions, with a spike occurring about 30 minutes after eating. For symptomatic individuals, this postprandial glucose peak will prompt an insulin surge followed by a rapid and steep decline in serum glucose.

Looking at Mayo Clinic medical records from mid-2008 to the end of 2017, Dr. Cortes and her colleagues wanted to determine the prevalence of hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia in the bariatric surgery population.

Additionally, the researchers wanted to see how patients who presented with symptoms suspicious for the syndrome were evaluated and to understand the efficacy of treatments.

Patients who had a diagnosis of type 1 diabetes mellitus and those who were on insulin or sulfonylureas were excluded from the retrospective chart review.

Of the 60 patients evaluated in the endocrinology clinic for symptoms suspicious for hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia, 51 (85%) were female, and 14 had a diagnosis of diabetes before surgery. Mean patient age at surgery was 43 years.

These symptomatic patients had a mean presurgical body mass index (BMI) of 42.8 kg/m2 (range, 38.6-49.3 kg/m2). Their mean time to maximal weight loss was 1.3 years after surgery, with symptoms beginning at 1.4 years after surgery. Patients lost a mean 37.4% of their body mass to reach a mean nadir BMI of 26.2.

Overall, about two-thirds of the surgeries performed were RYGB. Of patients with hypoglycemic symptoms, 73.3% had an RYGB. Revision of gastric bypass was the next most common surgery, at 21.8% overall; these patients constituted 15% of the hypoglycemic symptom group.

Of the patients with symptoms, 80% noted symptoms only after eating, with half of patients describing symptoms coming on 1-3 hours after eating. A little over a third of the patients didn’t describe the exact timing of symptoms.

Just 20 patients had a complete hypoglycemia work up bundle documented in their medical record, said Dr. Cortes. This consisted of measures of serum glucose, insulin, and C-peptide levels. Of the 20 patients, 5 met Whipple’s Triad criteria, and 4 of these patients received a diagnosis of hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia.

Two patients had a 72-hour fast, and neither of them met diagnostic criteria. Seventeen patients had a mixed meal tolerance test, with one individual meeting diagnostic criteria for and receiving a diagnosis of hypoinsulinemic hyperglycemia.

Of the five patients meeting diagnostic criteria (0.20% of surgical population), all had received RYGB, and two had previous weight loss procedures, said Dr. Cortes. For four of the patients, the surgical indication was weight loss; the other patient had an indication of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD).

“Dietary interventions are the most effective treatment” for post–bariatric surgery hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia in the Mayo Clinic experience, said Dr. Cortes.

Turning to the investigators’ examination of treatment recommendations for the 60 patients who reported hypoglycemic symptoms, most (95%) received an initial recommendation to manage symptoms by diet changes.

Most patients (77%) had at least one follow-up visit, with over half of these patients (61%) reporting improvement in symptoms, and seven patients (16%) reporting resolution. Twelve patients (27%) either remained the same or had not had a recurrence of symptoms.

Medication was prescribed for 12 patients; of them, 8 received the alpha glucosidase inhibitor acarbose and 7 responded, according to the record review. No one reported worsening of symptoms on acarbose.

Other individual patients were prescribed octreotide alone, or octreotide, pasireotide, or diazoxide in combination with acarbose, with variable results.

Dr. Cortes reported no conflicts of interest and no external sources of funding.

SOURCE: Cortes T et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-OR-2015.

 

– True post–bariatric surgery hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia is rare among bariatric surgery patients, based on a decade’s worth of experience from the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Dr. Tiffany Cortes

Of 2,386 patients who had bariatric surgery at Mayo, 60 (2.6%) had a postsurgical diagnosis code associated with hypoglycemia in their medical record. However, just five of them (0.25%) had documentation meeting the criteria for Whipple’s Triad, which consists of low blood glucose levels, symptoms associated with the low glucose levels, and symptom resolution when glucose levels are corrected, Tiffany Cortes, MD, reported in an oral presentation at Obesity Week, which is presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery .

“Postbariatric hypoglycemia is an infrequent occurrence among patients who present with suspicious symptoms,” said Dr. Cortes, an endocrinology fellow at the clinic.

Post–bariatric surgery hypoglycemia is characterized by neuroglycopenia with a documented plasma glucose of less than 54 mg/dL with symptom resolution after a rise in glucose levels; neuroglycopenia that occurs 1-3 hours after a meal; and symptom onset more than 6 months after bariatric surgery, said Dr. Cortes.

Previous work had found that the overall prevalence of post–bariatric surgery hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia ranged from 17%-34%, with severe symptoms seen in fewer than 1% of surgery recipients.

Bariatric surgery, especially Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB), may result in wide postprandial blood glucose excursions, with a spike occurring about 30 minutes after eating. For symptomatic individuals, this postprandial glucose peak will prompt an insulin surge followed by a rapid and steep decline in serum glucose.

Looking at Mayo Clinic medical records from mid-2008 to the end of 2017, Dr. Cortes and her colleagues wanted to determine the prevalence of hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia in the bariatric surgery population.

Additionally, the researchers wanted to see how patients who presented with symptoms suspicious for the syndrome were evaluated and to understand the efficacy of treatments.

Patients who had a diagnosis of type 1 diabetes mellitus and those who were on insulin or sulfonylureas were excluded from the retrospective chart review.

Of the 60 patients evaluated in the endocrinology clinic for symptoms suspicious for hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia, 51 (85%) were female, and 14 had a diagnosis of diabetes before surgery. Mean patient age at surgery was 43 years.

These symptomatic patients had a mean presurgical body mass index (BMI) of 42.8 kg/m2 (range, 38.6-49.3 kg/m2). Their mean time to maximal weight loss was 1.3 years after surgery, with symptoms beginning at 1.4 years after surgery. Patients lost a mean 37.4% of their body mass to reach a mean nadir BMI of 26.2.

Overall, about two-thirds of the surgeries performed were RYGB. Of patients with hypoglycemic symptoms, 73.3% had an RYGB. Revision of gastric bypass was the next most common surgery, at 21.8% overall; these patients constituted 15% of the hypoglycemic symptom group.

Of the patients with symptoms, 80% noted symptoms only after eating, with half of patients describing symptoms coming on 1-3 hours after eating. A little over a third of the patients didn’t describe the exact timing of symptoms.

Just 20 patients had a complete hypoglycemia work up bundle documented in their medical record, said Dr. Cortes. This consisted of measures of serum glucose, insulin, and C-peptide levels. Of the 20 patients, 5 met Whipple’s Triad criteria, and 4 of these patients received a diagnosis of hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia.

Two patients had a 72-hour fast, and neither of them met diagnostic criteria. Seventeen patients had a mixed meal tolerance test, with one individual meeting diagnostic criteria for and receiving a diagnosis of hypoinsulinemic hyperglycemia.

Of the five patients meeting diagnostic criteria (0.20% of surgical population), all had received RYGB, and two had previous weight loss procedures, said Dr. Cortes. For four of the patients, the surgical indication was weight loss; the other patient had an indication of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD).

“Dietary interventions are the most effective treatment” for post–bariatric surgery hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia in the Mayo Clinic experience, said Dr. Cortes.

Turning to the investigators’ examination of treatment recommendations for the 60 patients who reported hypoglycemic symptoms, most (95%) received an initial recommendation to manage symptoms by diet changes.

Most patients (77%) had at least one follow-up visit, with over half of these patients (61%) reporting improvement in symptoms, and seven patients (16%) reporting resolution. Twelve patients (27%) either remained the same or had not had a recurrence of symptoms.

Medication was prescribed for 12 patients; of them, 8 received the alpha glucosidase inhibitor acarbose and 7 responded, according to the record review. No one reported worsening of symptoms on acarbose.

Other individual patients were prescribed octreotide alone, or octreotide, pasireotide, or diazoxide in combination with acarbose, with variable results.

Dr. Cortes reported no conflicts of interest and no external sources of funding.

SOURCE: Cortes T et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-OR-2015.

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REPORTING FROM OBESITY WEEK 2018

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Key clinical point: Less than 1% of bariatric surgery patients had hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia.

Major finding: When strict diagnostic criteria were used, 0.20% received the diagnosis.

Study details: Single-center retrospective chart review of 2,386 patients receiving bariatric surgery.

Disclosures: Dr. Cortes reported no outside sources of funding and no conflicts of interest.

Source: Cortes T et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract T-OR-2015.

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Physical activity may count more for women who keep the pounds off

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Fri, 01/18/2019 - 18:08

Women who successfully maintained weight loss burned a greater proportion of their daily calories through physical activity than did controls with either normal or high body mass, but the same effect wasn’t seen in men, according to new analysis of a small study.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Dr. Ann Caldwell

Physical activity is a key component in successful maintenance of weight loss, but differential effects of physical activity between men and women had not been well explored, Ann Caldwell, PhD, said in an interview at Obesity Week 2018, presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

Dr. Caldwell and her colleagues at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, conducted a secondary analysis of case-control data of individuals with healthy weight, overweight, or obesity, and those who had successfully maintained weight loss. They compared total daily energy expenditure (TDEE) and physical activity energy expenditure (PAEE), looking at men and women in all three groups separately.

The study included 20 women and 5 men who had successfully maintained a weight loss of at least 13.6 kg for at least 1 year. These were matched with 20 women and 7 men with a body mass index within the healthy range, as controls for the weight loss maintainers at their post–weight loss BMI.

Another group of 22 women and 6 men with BMIs in the overweight or obese category served as controls for the weight loss maintainers at their pre–weight loss BMI.

For all participants, TDEE was measured using the doubly labeled water method for 7 days. This method tracks elimination of a set quantity of ingested water made up of two uncommon isotopes (hydrogen-2 and oxygen-18) to measure energy expenditure. Since the oxygen is lost both as water and carbon dioxide as a result of metabolism, the presence of less oxygen-18 over time indicates a higher total energy expenditure.

Indirect calorimetry was used to measure resting energy expenditure (REE), and energy expenditure related to physical activity was calculated by subtracting REE and a 10% fraction of TDEE (to account for the thermic effect of feeding) from total TDEE.

“There were significant sex-group interactions for TDEE, PAEE, and PAEE/TEE,” said Dr. Caldwell. She explained that the cutoff for statistical significance for the investigators’ analysis was set at P = .1, since sample sizes were so small for men.

For women who were weight-loss maintainers, both PAEE and PAEE/TDEE ratios were higher than for the female healthy-BMI and high-BMI control participants: PAEE was 822 kcal/day for the maintainers, 536 kcal/day for the healthy-BMI, and 669 kcal/day for the high-BMI controls (P less than .01 for both comparisons).

Dr. Caldwell and her colleagues saw no difference when comparing the PAEE/TDEE ratio for women in each of the control groups.

For men, by contrast, PAEE was highest for those with healthy BMIs, at 815 kcal/day, and lowest for those in the high-BMI control group, at 506 kcal/day. Men who were weight loss maintainers fell in the middle, at 772 kcal/day of PAEE. The PAEE/TDEE ratio was significantly higher for both weight loss maintainers and normal-BMI participants than for the high-BMI participants (P less than .07).

“These cross-sectional data suggest potential sex differences in the importance of [physical activity] for successful weight loss maintenance that should be explored further with objective measures,” wrote Dr. Caldwell and her coauthors.

The investigators are planning further work that incorporates objective physical activity data via actigraphy, and that will include a larger sample of men. Through a prospective study that overcomes the limitation of the present study, they hope to develop a clearer picture of sex differences in weight loss maintenance.

The National Institutes of Health supported the study. Dr. Caldwell reported no relevant conflicts of interest.
 

koakes@mdedge.com

SOURCE: Caldwell A et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract TP-3233.

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Women who successfully maintained weight loss burned a greater proportion of their daily calories through physical activity than did controls with either normal or high body mass, but the same effect wasn’t seen in men, according to new analysis of a small study.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Dr. Ann Caldwell

Physical activity is a key component in successful maintenance of weight loss, but differential effects of physical activity between men and women had not been well explored, Ann Caldwell, PhD, said in an interview at Obesity Week 2018, presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

Dr. Caldwell and her colleagues at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, conducted a secondary analysis of case-control data of individuals with healthy weight, overweight, or obesity, and those who had successfully maintained weight loss. They compared total daily energy expenditure (TDEE) and physical activity energy expenditure (PAEE), looking at men and women in all three groups separately.

The study included 20 women and 5 men who had successfully maintained a weight loss of at least 13.6 kg for at least 1 year. These were matched with 20 women and 7 men with a body mass index within the healthy range, as controls for the weight loss maintainers at their post–weight loss BMI.

Another group of 22 women and 6 men with BMIs in the overweight or obese category served as controls for the weight loss maintainers at their pre–weight loss BMI.

For all participants, TDEE was measured using the doubly labeled water method for 7 days. This method tracks elimination of a set quantity of ingested water made up of two uncommon isotopes (hydrogen-2 and oxygen-18) to measure energy expenditure. Since the oxygen is lost both as water and carbon dioxide as a result of metabolism, the presence of less oxygen-18 over time indicates a higher total energy expenditure.

Indirect calorimetry was used to measure resting energy expenditure (REE), and energy expenditure related to physical activity was calculated by subtracting REE and a 10% fraction of TDEE (to account for the thermic effect of feeding) from total TDEE.

“There were significant sex-group interactions for TDEE, PAEE, and PAEE/TEE,” said Dr. Caldwell. She explained that the cutoff for statistical significance for the investigators’ analysis was set at P = .1, since sample sizes were so small for men.

For women who were weight-loss maintainers, both PAEE and PAEE/TDEE ratios were higher than for the female healthy-BMI and high-BMI control participants: PAEE was 822 kcal/day for the maintainers, 536 kcal/day for the healthy-BMI, and 669 kcal/day for the high-BMI controls (P less than .01 for both comparisons).

Dr. Caldwell and her colleagues saw no difference when comparing the PAEE/TDEE ratio for women in each of the control groups.

For men, by contrast, PAEE was highest for those with healthy BMIs, at 815 kcal/day, and lowest for those in the high-BMI control group, at 506 kcal/day. Men who were weight loss maintainers fell in the middle, at 772 kcal/day of PAEE. The PAEE/TDEE ratio was significantly higher for both weight loss maintainers and normal-BMI participants than for the high-BMI participants (P less than .07).

“These cross-sectional data suggest potential sex differences in the importance of [physical activity] for successful weight loss maintenance that should be explored further with objective measures,” wrote Dr. Caldwell and her coauthors.

The investigators are planning further work that incorporates objective physical activity data via actigraphy, and that will include a larger sample of men. Through a prospective study that overcomes the limitation of the present study, they hope to develop a clearer picture of sex differences in weight loss maintenance.

The National Institutes of Health supported the study. Dr. Caldwell reported no relevant conflicts of interest.
 

koakes@mdedge.com

SOURCE: Caldwell A et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract TP-3233.

Women who successfully maintained weight loss burned a greater proportion of their daily calories through physical activity than did controls with either normal or high body mass, but the same effect wasn’t seen in men, according to new analysis of a small study.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Dr. Ann Caldwell

Physical activity is a key component in successful maintenance of weight loss, but differential effects of physical activity between men and women had not been well explored, Ann Caldwell, PhD, said in an interview at Obesity Week 2018, presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

Dr. Caldwell and her colleagues at the University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus, Aurora, conducted a secondary analysis of case-control data of individuals with healthy weight, overweight, or obesity, and those who had successfully maintained weight loss. They compared total daily energy expenditure (TDEE) and physical activity energy expenditure (PAEE), looking at men and women in all three groups separately.

The study included 20 women and 5 men who had successfully maintained a weight loss of at least 13.6 kg for at least 1 year. These were matched with 20 women and 7 men with a body mass index within the healthy range, as controls for the weight loss maintainers at their post–weight loss BMI.

Another group of 22 women and 6 men with BMIs in the overweight or obese category served as controls for the weight loss maintainers at their pre–weight loss BMI.

For all participants, TDEE was measured using the doubly labeled water method for 7 days. This method tracks elimination of a set quantity of ingested water made up of two uncommon isotopes (hydrogen-2 and oxygen-18) to measure energy expenditure. Since the oxygen is lost both as water and carbon dioxide as a result of metabolism, the presence of less oxygen-18 over time indicates a higher total energy expenditure.

Indirect calorimetry was used to measure resting energy expenditure (REE), and energy expenditure related to physical activity was calculated by subtracting REE and a 10% fraction of TDEE (to account for the thermic effect of feeding) from total TDEE.

“There were significant sex-group interactions for TDEE, PAEE, and PAEE/TEE,” said Dr. Caldwell. She explained that the cutoff for statistical significance for the investigators’ analysis was set at P = .1, since sample sizes were so small for men.

For women who were weight-loss maintainers, both PAEE and PAEE/TDEE ratios were higher than for the female healthy-BMI and high-BMI control participants: PAEE was 822 kcal/day for the maintainers, 536 kcal/day for the healthy-BMI, and 669 kcal/day for the high-BMI controls (P less than .01 for both comparisons).

Dr. Caldwell and her colleagues saw no difference when comparing the PAEE/TDEE ratio for women in each of the control groups.

For men, by contrast, PAEE was highest for those with healthy BMIs, at 815 kcal/day, and lowest for those in the high-BMI control group, at 506 kcal/day. Men who were weight loss maintainers fell in the middle, at 772 kcal/day of PAEE. The PAEE/TDEE ratio was significantly higher for both weight loss maintainers and normal-BMI participants than for the high-BMI participants (P less than .07).

“These cross-sectional data suggest potential sex differences in the importance of [physical activity] for successful weight loss maintenance that should be explored further with objective measures,” wrote Dr. Caldwell and her coauthors.

The investigators are planning further work that incorporates objective physical activity data via actigraphy, and that will include a larger sample of men. Through a prospective study that overcomes the limitation of the present study, they hope to develop a clearer picture of sex differences in weight loss maintenance.

The National Institutes of Health supported the study. Dr. Caldwell reported no relevant conflicts of interest.
 

koakes@mdedge.com

SOURCE: Caldwell A et al. Obesity Week 2018, Abstract TP-3233.

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REPORTING FROM OBESITY WEEK 2018

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Key clinical point: Women who kept weight off burned more calories in physical activity than did normal or high-BMI controls.

Major finding: In women, the ratio of physical activity energy expenditure to total daily energy expenditure was higher for successful weight-loss maintainers (P less than .01).

Study details: Secondary analysis of case-control study enrolling 80 individuals.

Disclosures: The National Institutes of Health funded the study. Dr. Caldwell reported no conflicts of interest.

Source: Caldwell A et al. Obesity Week 2018, abstract TP-3233.

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Bariatric surgery ups risk of suicide, self-harm

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NASHVILLE – After bariatric surgery, individuals are at increased risk of suicide and self-harm, according to findings from a meta-analysis presented at the meeting.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Dr. Dawn Roberts (left) and Nicole Pearl

Overall, the odds ratio was 1.69 for self-harm or suicide after bariatric surgery (95% confidence interval, 1.62-1.76; P less than .001), “indicating a nearly 70% increase in risk for self-harm or suicide following bariatric surgery,” wrote Dawn Roberts, PhD, of Bradley University, Peoria, Ill., and her coauthor, Nicole Pearl of Washington University, St. Louis, in the poster accompanying the presentation.

Further, as elapsed time from surgery grew, the suicide rate dropped (effect size covariance, r = –0.25). “Thus, the greatest risk for self-harm or suicide appears to emerge in the years immediately following surgery,” Dr. Roberts said at the meeting presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

The investigators had a primary objective of characterizing the association between bariatric surgery and suicide or self-harm. The secondary purpose of the meta-analysis was to find moderators of the association that could explain some of the variability that had previously been seen in studies looking at mental health outcomes after bariatric surgery.

Some of the potential moderators, explained the investigators, included the surgery type. With Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB), more tissue is removed, potentially causing “more extensive disruption of neural pathways,” the investigators wrote. With greater loss of small-intestine surface area might come more disruption of the gut-brain axis, along with unknown effects on metabolism and pharmacokinetics of psychiatric medication. Additionally, alcohol use disorder might have a more profound effect after gastric bypass surgery.

It had previously been shown that more than two-thirds of suicides happen within the first 3 years after bariatric surgery. With the initial weight loss comes renegotiation of personal relationships, and the potential for more mobility and perhaps expanded career choices; stress accompanies even positive changes in these major life domains. Some patients will also experience weight regain within the first 3 years, after an initial nadir. This also can cause deterioration in quality of life, the investigators explained.

Dr. Roberts and her coinvestigator acknowledge that some of the potential moderators may have been missed in the initial data reporting. For example, the “presurgical sample may be at higher risk for suicide or self-injury but withhold psychiatric history during evaluation for fear of being rejected for surgery.”

From an initial 2,676 studies identified for consideration, investigators in the end extracted data from 28 studies from the United States, Canada, Sweden, and Brazil. The studies had considerable heterogeneity in methods; some included presurgery/postsurgery analyses of the same patients, some had a comparator nonsurgical group, and some used a single postsurgical assessment.

In studies where no nonbariatric comparison sample was available, the investigators assigned interpolated comparison. To arrive at this measure, they drew on the World Health Organization–reported base rate of suicides in the study country at the approximate year of assessment. Suicide was the only interpolated outcome.

Various measures of suicide and self-harm were captured, including completed and probable suicides, suicide attempts, and self-harm events. In some studies, information was drawn from a suicide-specific questionnaire, or from a suicide item on another type of questionnaire.

There was significant variability in the odds ratios for suicide or self-harm across studies, Dr. Roberts said.

The researchers plan to continue analyzing additional measures captured in the meta-analysis, such as gender, age, initial body mass index, surgery type, and the percent of excess weight lost at the time of assessment for suicide or self-harm risk. They reported no outside sources of funding, and no conflicts of interest.
 

SOURCE: Roberts, D et al. Obesity Week 2018, Poster A433.

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NASHVILLE – After bariatric surgery, individuals are at increased risk of suicide and self-harm, according to findings from a meta-analysis presented at the meeting.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Dr. Dawn Roberts (left) and Nicole Pearl

Overall, the odds ratio was 1.69 for self-harm or suicide after bariatric surgery (95% confidence interval, 1.62-1.76; P less than .001), “indicating a nearly 70% increase in risk for self-harm or suicide following bariatric surgery,” wrote Dawn Roberts, PhD, of Bradley University, Peoria, Ill., and her coauthor, Nicole Pearl of Washington University, St. Louis, in the poster accompanying the presentation.

Further, as elapsed time from surgery grew, the suicide rate dropped (effect size covariance, r = –0.25). “Thus, the greatest risk for self-harm or suicide appears to emerge in the years immediately following surgery,” Dr. Roberts said at the meeting presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

The investigators had a primary objective of characterizing the association between bariatric surgery and suicide or self-harm. The secondary purpose of the meta-analysis was to find moderators of the association that could explain some of the variability that had previously been seen in studies looking at mental health outcomes after bariatric surgery.

Some of the potential moderators, explained the investigators, included the surgery type. With Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB), more tissue is removed, potentially causing “more extensive disruption of neural pathways,” the investigators wrote. With greater loss of small-intestine surface area might come more disruption of the gut-brain axis, along with unknown effects on metabolism and pharmacokinetics of psychiatric medication. Additionally, alcohol use disorder might have a more profound effect after gastric bypass surgery.

It had previously been shown that more than two-thirds of suicides happen within the first 3 years after bariatric surgery. With the initial weight loss comes renegotiation of personal relationships, and the potential for more mobility and perhaps expanded career choices; stress accompanies even positive changes in these major life domains. Some patients will also experience weight regain within the first 3 years, after an initial nadir. This also can cause deterioration in quality of life, the investigators explained.

Dr. Roberts and her coinvestigator acknowledge that some of the potential moderators may have been missed in the initial data reporting. For example, the “presurgical sample may be at higher risk for suicide or self-injury but withhold psychiatric history during evaluation for fear of being rejected for surgery.”

From an initial 2,676 studies identified for consideration, investigators in the end extracted data from 28 studies from the United States, Canada, Sweden, and Brazil. The studies had considerable heterogeneity in methods; some included presurgery/postsurgery analyses of the same patients, some had a comparator nonsurgical group, and some used a single postsurgical assessment.

In studies where no nonbariatric comparison sample was available, the investigators assigned interpolated comparison. To arrive at this measure, they drew on the World Health Organization–reported base rate of suicides in the study country at the approximate year of assessment. Suicide was the only interpolated outcome.

Various measures of suicide and self-harm were captured, including completed and probable suicides, suicide attempts, and self-harm events. In some studies, information was drawn from a suicide-specific questionnaire, or from a suicide item on another type of questionnaire.

There was significant variability in the odds ratios for suicide or self-harm across studies, Dr. Roberts said.

The researchers plan to continue analyzing additional measures captured in the meta-analysis, such as gender, age, initial body mass index, surgery type, and the percent of excess weight lost at the time of assessment for suicide or self-harm risk. They reported no outside sources of funding, and no conflicts of interest.
 

SOURCE: Roberts, D et al. Obesity Week 2018, Poster A433.

NASHVILLE – After bariatric surgery, individuals are at increased risk of suicide and self-harm, according to findings from a meta-analysis presented at the meeting.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Dr. Dawn Roberts (left) and Nicole Pearl

Overall, the odds ratio was 1.69 for self-harm or suicide after bariatric surgery (95% confidence interval, 1.62-1.76; P less than .001), “indicating a nearly 70% increase in risk for self-harm or suicide following bariatric surgery,” wrote Dawn Roberts, PhD, of Bradley University, Peoria, Ill., and her coauthor, Nicole Pearl of Washington University, St. Louis, in the poster accompanying the presentation.

Further, as elapsed time from surgery grew, the suicide rate dropped (effect size covariance, r = –0.25). “Thus, the greatest risk for self-harm or suicide appears to emerge in the years immediately following surgery,” Dr. Roberts said at the meeting presented by the Obesity Society and the American Society for Metabolic and Bariatric Surgery.

The investigators had a primary objective of characterizing the association between bariatric surgery and suicide or self-harm. The secondary purpose of the meta-analysis was to find moderators of the association that could explain some of the variability that had previously been seen in studies looking at mental health outcomes after bariatric surgery.

Some of the potential moderators, explained the investigators, included the surgery type. With Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB), more tissue is removed, potentially causing “more extensive disruption of neural pathways,” the investigators wrote. With greater loss of small-intestine surface area might come more disruption of the gut-brain axis, along with unknown effects on metabolism and pharmacokinetics of psychiatric medication. Additionally, alcohol use disorder might have a more profound effect after gastric bypass surgery.

It had previously been shown that more than two-thirds of suicides happen within the first 3 years after bariatric surgery. With the initial weight loss comes renegotiation of personal relationships, and the potential for more mobility and perhaps expanded career choices; stress accompanies even positive changes in these major life domains. Some patients will also experience weight regain within the first 3 years, after an initial nadir. This also can cause deterioration in quality of life, the investigators explained.

Dr. Roberts and her coinvestigator acknowledge that some of the potential moderators may have been missed in the initial data reporting. For example, the “presurgical sample may be at higher risk for suicide or self-injury but withhold psychiatric history during evaluation for fear of being rejected for surgery.”

From an initial 2,676 studies identified for consideration, investigators in the end extracted data from 28 studies from the United States, Canada, Sweden, and Brazil. The studies had considerable heterogeneity in methods; some included presurgery/postsurgery analyses of the same patients, some had a comparator nonsurgical group, and some used a single postsurgical assessment.

In studies where no nonbariatric comparison sample was available, the investigators assigned interpolated comparison. To arrive at this measure, they drew on the World Health Organization–reported base rate of suicides in the study country at the approximate year of assessment. Suicide was the only interpolated outcome.

Various measures of suicide and self-harm were captured, including completed and probable suicides, suicide attempts, and self-harm events. In some studies, information was drawn from a suicide-specific questionnaire, or from a suicide item on another type of questionnaire.

There was significant variability in the odds ratios for suicide or self-harm across studies, Dr. Roberts said.

The researchers plan to continue analyzing additional measures captured in the meta-analysis, such as gender, age, initial body mass index, surgery type, and the percent of excess weight lost at the time of assessment for suicide or self-harm risk. They reported no outside sources of funding, and no conflicts of interest.
 

SOURCE: Roberts, D et al. Obesity Week 2018, Poster A433.

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Key clinical point: Bariatric surgery patients have an elevated risk for suicide or self-harm.

Major finding: The odds ratio for suicide or self-harm was 1.69 after bariatric surgery.

Study details: Meta-analysis of 28 studies of bariatric surgery patients.

Disclosures: The authors reported no conflicts of interest and no outside sources of funding.

Source: Roberts D et al. Obesity Week 2018, Poster A433.

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Antibiotic-obesity link ‘clinically insignificant’ at age 10 years

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– Antibiotic use in the first 2 years of life was associated with a small amount of weight gain by 10 years of age, but the amount is “likely clinically insignificant,” according to new data presented at Obesity Week.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Sheryl Rifas-Shiman

At 10 years of age, children without chronic health conditions who received any antibiotics had an odds ratio of 1.02 for being overweight or obese; for children with complex chronic conditions, the OR was 1.07 (95% confidence intervals, 0.97-1.07 and 0.96-1.19, respectively). The findings were based on data from almost 60,000 children studied in a large, multi-institutional national cohort.

“This is good news,” said first author Sheryl Rifas-Shiman, MPH, discussing the findings during a poster session. She noted that the 10-year data from the longitudinal study are consistent with findings at the 5-year mark that had previously been reported.

The study comes against the background of a recent meta-analysis finding that children given any antibiotics before age 24 months had a higher body mass index z-score (BMI-z) in childhood than children who didn’t take antibiotics. Disruptions that antibiotics can cause in the gut microbiome have been hypothesized to promote overweight and obesity in children.

The present study was conducted using electronic medical record data from 2009-2016 drawn from institutions participating in PCORnet, a national research collaboration and clearinghouse.

The analysis dichotomized the cohort into those who, by 24 months of age, had received any antibiotics and those who received none. Ms. Rifas-Shiman and her colleagues also looked at a categorical count of the number of antibiotic prescriptions, from 0 to 4 or more.

Finally, they broke the type of antibiotics into narrow- or broad-spectrum, she said in an interview during the poster session. In order for exposure to be considered narrow-spectrum only, the analysis was limited to participants who had no broad-spectrum antibiotic exposure during the same time frame.

The study’s multivariable analysis also took into account complex chronic conditions the children may have had.

Fifty-seven percent of children received antibiotics before the age of 24 months. Patients were overall just under half (48%) female, and about half (49%) were white. Black children made up 37% of the cohort, and Hispanic children constituted 12%.

By 10 years of age, 36% of participants were overweight or obese, with BMIs at or above the 85th percentile, according to 2000 Centers for Disease Control growth charts.

There was a suggestion of a dose-response relationship for both narrow- and broad-spectrum antibiotics because only at the higher antibiotic exposures did increased BMI-z reach statistical significance. However, broad-spectrum antibiotics were not more likely than narrow-spectrum antibiotics to be associated with increased BMI-z.

Other multivariable adjustment took into account site clustering and adjusted for sex, race, ethnicity, preterm birth, asthma or infectious disease diagnoses, and corticosteroid exposure, as well as health care visits in the first 2 years of life.

Limitations of the study included the fact that it was observational, raising the potential for undetected confounders. Also, since the study looked at prescription, rather than dispensing data, there could be some exposure misclassification by which children who were classified as having taken antibiotics did not actually take them or did not take the full amount prescribed.

“Antibiotics should always be used judiciously; however, the long-term risk of childhood obesity from antibiotics in infancy appears to be small and clinically insignificant,” wrote Ms. Rifas-Shiman, of the department of population medicine, Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, both in Boston.

The study was funded by an award from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute.
 

SOURCE: Rifas-Shiman et al. Obesity Week 2018, Poster TP-3155.

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– Antibiotic use in the first 2 years of life was associated with a small amount of weight gain by 10 years of age, but the amount is “likely clinically insignificant,” according to new data presented at Obesity Week.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Sheryl Rifas-Shiman

At 10 years of age, children without chronic health conditions who received any antibiotics had an odds ratio of 1.02 for being overweight or obese; for children with complex chronic conditions, the OR was 1.07 (95% confidence intervals, 0.97-1.07 and 0.96-1.19, respectively). The findings were based on data from almost 60,000 children studied in a large, multi-institutional national cohort.

“This is good news,” said first author Sheryl Rifas-Shiman, MPH, discussing the findings during a poster session. She noted that the 10-year data from the longitudinal study are consistent with findings at the 5-year mark that had previously been reported.

The study comes against the background of a recent meta-analysis finding that children given any antibiotics before age 24 months had a higher body mass index z-score (BMI-z) in childhood than children who didn’t take antibiotics. Disruptions that antibiotics can cause in the gut microbiome have been hypothesized to promote overweight and obesity in children.

The present study was conducted using electronic medical record data from 2009-2016 drawn from institutions participating in PCORnet, a national research collaboration and clearinghouse.

The analysis dichotomized the cohort into those who, by 24 months of age, had received any antibiotics and those who received none. Ms. Rifas-Shiman and her colleagues also looked at a categorical count of the number of antibiotic prescriptions, from 0 to 4 or more.

Finally, they broke the type of antibiotics into narrow- or broad-spectrum, she said in an interview during the poster session. In order for exposure to be considered narrow-spectrum only, the analysis was limited to participants who had no broad-spectrum antibiotic exposure during the same time frame.

The study’s multivariable analysis also took into account complex chronic conditions the children may have had.

Fifty-seven percent of children received antibiotics before the age of 24 months. Patients were overall just under half (48%) female, and about half (49%) were white. Black children made up 37% of the cohort, and Hispanic children constituted 12%.

By 10 years of age, 36% of participants were overweight or obese, with BMIs at or above the 85th percentile, according to 2000 Centers for Disease Control growth charts.

There was a suggestion of a dose-response relationship for both narrow- and broad-spectrum antibiotics because only at the higher antibiotic exposures did increased BMI-z reach statistical significance. However, broad-spectrum antibiotics were not more likely than narrow-spectrum antibiotics to be associated with increased BMI-z.

Other multivariable adjustment took into account site clustering and adjusted for sex, race, ethnicity, preterm birth, asthma or infectious disease diagnoses, and corticosteroid exposure, as well as health care visits in the first 2 years of life.

Limitations of the study included the fact that it was observational, raising the potential for undetected confounders. Also, since the study looked at prescription, rather than dispensing data, there could be some exposure misclassification by which children who were classified as having taken antibiotics did not actually take them or did not take the full amount prescribed.

“Antibiotics should always be used judiciously; however, the long-term risk of childhood obesity from antibiotics in infancy appears to be small and clinically insignificant,” wrote Ms. Rifas-Shiman, of the department of population medicine, Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, both in Boston.

The study was funded by an award from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute.
 

SOURCE: Rifas-Shiman et al. Obesity Week 2018, Poster TP-3155.

 

– Antibiotic use in the first 2 years of life was associated with a small amount of weight gain by 10 years of age, but the amount is “likely clinically insignificant,” according to new data presented at Obesity Week.

Kari Oakes/MDedge News
Sheryl Rifas-Shiman

At 10 years of age, children without chronic health conditions who received any antibiotics had an odds ratio of 1.02 for being overweight or obese; for children with complex chronic conditions, the OR was 1.07 (95% confidence intervals, 0.97-1.07 and 0.96-1.19, respectively). The findings were based on data from almost 60,000 children studied in a large, multi-institutional national cohort.

“This is good news,” said first author Sheryl Rifas-Shiman, MPH, discussing the findings during a poster session. She noted that the 10-year data from the longitudinal study are consistent with findings at the 5-year mark that had previously been reported.

The study comes against the background of a recent meta-analysis finding that children given any antibiotics before age 24 months had a higher body mass index z-score (BMI-z) in childhood than children who didn’t take antibiotics. Disruptions that antibiotics can cause in the gut microbiome have been hypothesized to promote overweight and obesity in children.

The present study was conducted using electronic medical record data from 2009-2016 drawn from institutions participating in PCORnet, a national research collaboration and clearinghouse.

The analysis dichotomized the cohort into those who, by 24 months of age, had received any antibiotics and those who received none. Ms. Rifas-Shiman and her colleagues also looked at a categorical count of the number of antibiotic prescriptions, from 0 to 4 or more.

Finally, they broke the type of antibiotics into narrow- or broad-spectrum, she said in an interview during the poster session. In order for exposure to be considered narrow-spectrum only, the analysis was limited to participants who had no broad-spectrum antibiotic exposure during the same time frame.

The study’s multivariable analysis also took into account complex chronic conditions the children may have had.

Fifty-seven percent of children received antibiotics before the age of 24 months. Patients were overall just under half (48%) female, and about half (49%) were white. Black children made up 37% of the cohort, and Hispanic children constituted 12%.

By 10 years of age, 36% of participants were overweight or obese, with BMIs at or above the 85th percentile, according to 2000 Centers for Disease Control growth charts.

There was a suggestion of a dose-response relationship for both narrow- and broad-spectrum antibiotics because only at the higher antibiotic exposures did increased BMI-z reach statistical significance. However, broad-spectrum antibiotics were not more likely than narrow-spectrum antibiotics to be associated with increased BMI-z.

Other multivariable adjustment took into account site clustering and adjusted for sex, race, ethnicity, preterm birth, asthma or infectious disease diagnoses, and corticosteroid exposure, as well as health care visits in the first 2 years of life.

Limitations of the study included the fact that it was observational, raising the potential for undetected confounders. Also, since the study looked at prescription, rather than dispensing data, there could be some exposure misclassification by which children who were classified as having taken antibiotics did not actually take them or did not take the full amount prescribed.

“Antibiotics should always be used judiciously; however, the long-term risk of childhood obesity from antibiotics in infancy appears to be small and clinically insignificant,” wrote Ms. Rifas-Shiman, of the department of population medicine, Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, both in Boston.

The study was funded by an award from the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute.
 

SOURCE: Rifas-Shiman et al. Obesity Week 2018, Poster TP-3155.

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REPORTING FROM OBESITY WEEK 2018

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Key clinical point: Antibiotic use before the age of 2 years was not associated with clinically significant weight gain at age 10 years.

Major finding: By age 10 years, children given antibiotics without chronic health conditions had an odds ratio of 1.02 for being overweight or obese, and those with chronic health conditions had an OR of 1.07, with 95% confidence intervals for both groups crossing unity.

Study details: Prospective, multisite, national cohort study of 56,727 children.

Disclosures: The study was funded by the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute. Ms. Rifas-Shiman reported that she had no conflicts of interest.

Source: Rifas-Shiman S et al. Obesity Week 2018, poster TP-3155,

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