Clinical Review

Obesity: When to consider medication

Author and Disclosure Information

 

References

Discuss all options

This patient with class III obesity (BMI ≥40 kg/m2) is eligible for bariatric surgery; however, she is not interested in pursuing it at this time. It is important to discuss all of her options before deciding on a treatment plan. For patients like this, who would benefit from more than modest weight loss, consider a multidisciplinary approach including lifestyle modifications, pharmacotherapy, devices (eg, an intragastric balloon), and/or surgery. You would need to make clear to the patient that she may still be eligible for insurance coverage for surgery if she changes her mind after pursuing other treatments as long as her BMI remains ≥35 kg/m2 with obesity-related comorbidities.

Naltrexone SR/bupropion SR is a good choice for this patient because she describes debilitating cravings and addictive behavior surrounding food. Patients taking naltrexone SR/bupropion SR in the Contrave Obesity Research (COR)-I and COR-II phase III trials experienced a reduced frequency of food cravings, reduced difficulty in resisting food cravings, and an increased ability to control eating compared with those assigned to placebo.32,33

Added benefits. Bupropion also could help this patient quit smoking and improve her mood, as it is FDA-approved for smoking cessation and depression. She denies anxiety and seizures, so bupropion is not contraindicated. Even if a patient denies a history of seizure, ask about any conditions that predispose to seizures, such as anorexia nervosa or bulimia or the abrupt discontinuation of alcohol, benzodiazepines, barbiturates, or antiepileptic drugs.

Opioid use. Although the patient denies pain, ask about potential opioid use, as naltrexone is an opioid receptor antagonist. Patients should be informed that opioids may be ineffective if they are required unexpectedly (eg, for trauma) and that naltrexone SR/bupropion SR should be withheld for any planned surgical procedure potentially requiring opioid use.

Other options. While naltrexone SR/bupropion SR is the most appropriate choice for this patient because it addresses her problematic eating behaviors while potentially improving mood and assisting with smoking cessation, phentermine/topiramate ER, lorcaserin, and liraglutide 3 mg also could be used and certainly should be tried if naltrexone SR/bupropion SR does not produce the desired weight loss.

Adverse effects. Titrate naltrexone SR/bupropion SR slowly to the treatment dose to minimize risks and adverse events.31 The most common adverse effects reported in phase III trials were nausea, constipation, and headache.34,35,45,46 Discontinue naltrexone SR/bupropion SR if the patient does not achieve 5% weight loss at 16 weeks (after 12 weeks at the maintenance dose).31

CASE 4 Regaining weight after gastric bypass

A 65-year-old woman with obesity (BMI 39 kg/m2)who underwent Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery and who has type 2 diabetes, congestive heart failure, coronary artery disease, hypertension, and hyperlipidemia, remains concerned about her weight. She lost 100 lb following surgery and maintained her weight for 3 years, but then regained 30 lb. She comes in for an office visit because she is concerned about her increasing blood sugar and wants to prevent further weight gain. Her medications include metformin 1,000 mg twice per day, lisinopril 5 mg/d, carvedilol 12.5 mg twice per day, simvastatin 20 mg/d, and aspirin 81 mg/d. Laboratory test results are normal except for a hemoglobin A1c of 8%. She denies pancreatitis and a personal or family history of thyroid cancer.

Which medication is an appropriate next step for this patient?

Pages

Recommended Reading

Does hormone therapy increase breast cancer risk in BRCA1 mutation carriers?
MDedge ObGyn
HPV testing detects cervical precancers earlier than cytology
MDedge ObGyn
Maternal lifestyle affects child obesity
MDedge ObGyn
Immunogenicity of two-dose Gardasil 9 persists at 36 months
MDedge ObGyn
ACA coverage mandate leads to more insurance for young women, early gynecologic cancer diagnoses
MDedge ObGyn
Bivalent HPV vaccine brings no significant increase in 38 potential adverse outcomes
MDedge ObGyn
Omega-3 heart benefit: Just another fish tale?
MDedge ObGyn
Is fish oil’s heart benefit a fish tale?
MDedge ObGyn
Blood pressure meds cut cognitive impairment risk
MDedge ObGyn
Antibody cleared amyloid plaques, slowed cognitive decline
MDedge ObGyn