Anti-Obesity Medication in the Management of Children and Adolescents With Obesity: Recent Developments and Research Gaps.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to evaluate the role of anti-obesity medications (AOM) in bridging the gap between lifestyle treatment and bariatric surgery for pediatric obesity management.
Results Summary
The study highlights that AOMs like semaglutide and phentermine/topiramate show substantial effectiveness in BMI reduction with mostly mild to moderate adverse events, but long-term safety and effects beyond BMI remain understudied. Bariatric surgery is noted for its large effects in adolescents with obesity.
Population
Adolescents aged 12 years and older with obesity.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Health behaviour and lifestyle treatment (HBLT) | no change | body mass index (BMI) | adolescents with obesity aged 12 years and older | limited | limited effects | #1 |
metabolic and bariatric surgery | decrease | body mass index (BMI) | adolescents with obesity aged 12 years and older | large | large effects | #2 |
semaglutide | decrease | body mass index (BMI) | adolescents with obesity aged 12 years and older | substantial | effectiveness is substantial | #3 |
phentermine/topiramate | decrease | body mass index (BMI) | adolescents with obesity aged 12 years and older | substantial | effectiveness is substantial | #4 |
BACKGROUND: Paediatric obesity is a global public health concern. While in most countries the incidence keeps rising, the need for effective and long-term management for children and adolescents living with this chronic, relapsing disease is pressing. Health behaviour and lifestyle treatment (HBLT) is recommended as first-line treatment. METHODS: Narrative review. RESULTS: A new generation of recently approved anti-obesity medications (AOM) now has the potential to fill the gap between limited effects on body mass index (BMI) by HBLT alone and large effects by metabolic and bariatric surgery in adolescents with obesity aged 12 years and older. While, for semaglutide and phentermine/topiramate, effectiveness is substantial with relevant, but mostly mild to moderate adverse events, there is a gap in evidence regarding long-term effects and safety, effects on outcomes beyond BMI reduction and data for certain groups of patients, such as children < 12 years and minority groups. When integrating AOM treatment into national healthcare systems it should be offered as part of a comprehensive patient-centred approach. CONCLUSION: This article summarizes recent AOM developments, integration into paediatric obesity management, and identifies research gaps.