Conference Coverage

Early metformin minimizes antipsychotic-induced weight gain


 

Validating pharmacologic management

The lead author of the new guideline, Ita Fitzgerald, a teacher in clinical pharmacy and senior pharmacist at St. Patrick’s Mental Health Services in Dublin, pointed out that there is a bias toward not using drugs for weight management and shifting the responsibility onto the patients themselves, something that is very often out of their control.

“The purpose of the guideline was to decide on a range of criteria to maximize the use of metformin, to recognize that for many people, pharmacological management is a valid and important option that could and should be more widely used and to provide precise and practical guidance to physicians to facilitate a more widespread use,” Ms. Fitzgerald said in an interview.

According to Fitzgerald, who is pursuing her doctorate at University College Cork (Ireland), one of the most outstanding results of the work is that it highlights that the main benefit of metformin is to flatten rather than reverse antipsychotic-induced weight gain and that indicating it late can nullify that effect.

“In all the recommendations, we try very hard to shift the focus from metformin’s role as a weight reversal agent to one as a weight management agent that should be used early in treatment, which is when most weight gain occurs. If metformin succeeds in flattening that increase, that’s a huge potential benefit for an inexpensive and easily accessible drug. When people have already established weight gain, metformin may not be enough and alternative treatments should be used,” she said.

In addition to its effects on weight, metformin has many other potential health benefits. Of particular importance is that it reduces hyperphagia-mediated antipsychotic-induced weight gain, Ms. Fitzgerald pointed out.

“This is subjectively very important for patients and provides a more positive experience when taking antipsychotics. Antipsychotic-induced weight gain is one of the main reasons for premature discontinuation or incomplete adherence to these drugs and therefore needs to be addressed proactively,” she concluded.

Ms. Fitzgerald and Dr. Michat have disclosed no relevant financial relationships.

A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com. This article was translated from the Medscape Spanish edition.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Do psychotropic meds raise or lower COVID risk in psych patients?
MDedge Psychiatry
New data support electroconvulsive therapy for severe depression
MDedge Psychiatry
Clozapine and cancer risk in schizophrenia patients: New data
MDedge Psychiatry
Neuropsychiatric risks of COVID-19: New data
MDedge Psychiatry
The psychopathic brain: New insight
MDedge Psychiatry
Multiple mental health woes? Blame it on genetics
MDedge Psychiatry
Antipsychotic safe, effective for resistant depression in phase 3 trial
MDedge Psychiatry
Dexmedetomidine sublingual film for agitation
MDedge Psychiatry
Telepsychiatry helped maintain standard of schizophrenia care during COVID
MDedge Psychiatry
Should clozapine be discontinued in a patient receiving chemotherapy?
MDedge Psychiatry