Effectiveness of Medications Used to Attenuate Antipsychotic-Related Weight Gain and Metabolic Abnormalities: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

被引:0
作者
Lawrence Maayan
Julia Vakhrusheva
Christoph U Correll
机构
[1] Child Study Center,
[2] New York University School of Medicine,undefined
[3] Nathan Kline Institute for Psychiatric Research,undefined
[4] The Zucker Hillside Hospital,undefined
[5] Psychiatry Research,undefined
[6] North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System,undefined
[7] Albert Einstein College of Medicine,undefined
[8] The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research,undefined
来源
Neuropsychopharmacology | 2010年 / 35卷
关键词
antipsychotics; weight gain; intervention; pharmacologic; weight loss; metformin;
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学科分类号
摘要
Antipsychotic-related weight gain and metabolic effects are a critical outcome for patients requiring these medications. A literature search using MEDLINE, Web of Science, PsycNET, and EMBASE for randomized, open and double-blind, placebo-controlled trials of medications targeting antipsychotic-induced weight gain was performed. Primary outcome measures were change and endpoint values in body weight and body mass index (BMI). Secondary outcomes included ⩾7% weight gain, all-cause discontinuation, change in waist circumference, glucose and lipid metabolism parameters, and psychiatric symptoms. Sensitivity analyses were conducted to explain heterogeneity of the results. Across 32 studies including 1482 subjects, 15 different medications were tested: amantadine, dextroamphetamine, d-fenfluramine, famotidine, fluoxetine, fluvoxamine, metformin, nizatidine, orlistat, phenylpropanolamine, reboxetine, rosiglitazone, sibutramine, topiramate, and metformin+sibutramine. Compared with placebo, metformin had the greatest weight loss (N=7, n=334, −2.94 kg (confidence interval (CI:−4.89,−0.99)), followed by d-fenfluramine (N=1, n=16, −2.60 kg (CI:−5.14,−0.06)), sibutramine (N=2, n=55, −2.56 kg (CI:−3.91,−1.22)), topiramate (N=2, n=133, −2.52 kg (CI:−4.87,−0.16)), and reboxetine (N=2, n=79, −1.90 kg (CI:−3.07,−0.72)). Weight loss remained significant with metformin initiation after weight gain had occurred, but not when started concomitantly with antipsychotics. Nausea rates were not higher with any treatment compared with placebo. In all, 5 of 15 psychopharmacologic interventions aimed at ameliorating antipsychotic-induced weight gain outperformed placebo. Results were most robust for metformin, although these were modest and heterogeneous. Only one (negative) combination treatment study was available and head-to-head studies are absent. None of the agents were able to entirely reverse weight gain because of antipsychotics. At present, no treatment has sufficient evidence to recommend broad clinical usage. Antipsychotics with no or minimal cardiometabolic liability, as well as interventions that prevent or normalize adverse antipsychotic cardiometabolic effects are needed.
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页码:1520 / 1530
页数:10
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