Lorcaserin vs. Phentermine among non-surgical and surgical obese patients: Anthropometric, glycemic, lipid, safety and cost outcomesShow others and affiliations
2019 (English)In: Annals of Medicine and Surgery, E-ISSN 2049-0801, Vol. 45, p. 75-81Article in journal (Refereed) Published
Abstract [en]
Background: To evaluate effectiveness, safety, and costs of Lorcaserin vs. phentermine among obese nonâsurgical and surgical patients (post bariatric surgery). Methods: This retrospective study retrieved charts of all patients (January 2013âJune 2016) who received Lorcaserin or phentermine for 3 months. The study assessed anthropometric, glycemic, and lipid changes, as well as side effects and cost of medications among overweight and obese non-surgical (n = 83) and surgical patients (n = 46). These two patient groups were compared using Chi-square (Ï2) and unpairedâtâ test for qualitative and quantitative variables respectively. Results: At 3 months, among the non-surgical group, Phentermine patients had greater percentage of total weight loss (TWL%) (7.65 ± 8.26 vs. 2.99 ± 3.72%, P = 0.003), and greater BMI reduction (â3.16 ± 3.63 vs. â1.15 ± 1.53 kg/m2, P = 0.003) than Lorcaserin. Within the surgical group, Lorcaserin patients had significantly smaller TWL% (1.86 ± 5.06 vs. 7.62 ± 9.80%, P = 0.012), and smaller BMI reduction (â0.74 ± 1.80 vs. â3.06 ± 4.08 kg/m2, P = 0.012) than Phentermine. Lorcaserin exhibited significant total cholesterol and LDL improvements only among surgical patients with significant weight reduction (â¥5% TW). Both medications were not associated with glycemic improvements among non-surgical and surgical groups. Phentermine had slightly more side effects but was less expensive. Conclusions: Among both patient groups, phentermine was more effective in achieving weight loss. Lorcaserin showed dyslipidemia improvements only among surgical patients who achieved significant weight reduction. Anti-obesity medications as part of weight management programs can result in weight loss among non-surgical and surgical patients, or halt weight regain among surgical patients. This is the first study to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of two anti-obesity medications (lorcaserin vs. phentermine) among two distinct obese patient groups, non-surgical and surgical patients.
Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Elsevier, 2019. Vol. 45, p. 75-81
Keywords [en]
Obesity, Lorcaserin, Phentermine, Weight regain, Bariatric surgery, Lipid profile, Glycemic, parameters
National Category
Surgery
Research subject
Individual and Society VIDSOC
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:his:diva-17505DOI: 10.1016/j.amsu.2019.07.024ISI: 000482224200016PubMedID: 31388419Scopus ID: 2-s2.0-85069915724OAI: oai:DiVA.org:his-17505DiVA, id: diva2:1341545
2019-08-092019-08-092023-10-06Bibliographically approved