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Optimal time period for weight loss drugs: Debate continues


 

Why stop the medications? Side effects and lack of insurance coverage

Many people have to discontinue these newer medications for that exact reason.

When Ms. Hartman’s insurance coverage lapsed, she had to go without semaglutide for a while.

“At that time, I absolutely gained weight back up into an abnormal BMI range,” Ms. Hartman said. When she was able to resume the medication, she lost weight again and her BMI returned to normal range.

These medications currently cost around $1,400 per month in the United States, unless patients can access initiatives such as company coupons. Some insurers, including state-subsidized Medicare and Medicaid, don’t cover the new medications.

Dr. O’Donnell said, “More accessibility for more people would help in the big picture.”

Other patients stop taking GLP-1 agonists because they experience side effects, such as nausea.

“Gastrointestinal complaints ... are the number one reason for people to come off the medication,” said Disha Narang, MD, an endocrinologist and obesity medicine specialist at Northwestern Medicine Lake Forest (Ill.) Hospital.

“It is an elective therapy, so it is not mandatory that someone take it. So if they are not feeling well or they are sick, then that’s a major reason for coming off of it,” she said.

Dan Bessesen, MD, professor of medicine at the University of Colorado at Denver, Aurora, and chief of endocrinology, agreed.

Patients are unlikely to stay on these medications if they feel nauseous or experience vomiting, he said. Although he noted there are options to try to counter this, such as starting patients on a very low dose of the drug and up-titrating slowly. This method requires good coordination between the patient and physician.

Goutham Rao, MD, a professor of medicine at Case Western Reserve University and head of the weight-loss initiative Fitter Me at University Hospitals, both in Cleveland, said that prior to prescribing GLP-1 agonists for weight loss, he sets four basic, nonnegotiable goals for patients: “to have breakfast within 30 minutes of getting up, to drink just water, no food or drink after 7:00 p.m. except for water, and 30 minutes of continuous exercise per day, which is typically, for older clientele, walking.”

This, he said, can help establish good habits because if “patients are not engaged psychologically in weight loss ... they expect the medication to do [all] the work.”

Most regain weight after stopping obesity medications

As Ms. Hartman’s story illustrates, discontinuing the medications often leads to weight regain.

“Without the medicine, there are a variety of things that will happen. Appetite will tend to increase, and so [patients] will gradually tend to eat more over time,” Dr. Bessesen noted.

“So it may take a long time for the weight regain to happen, but in every study where an obesity medicine has been used, and then it is stopped, the weight goes back to where it was on lifestyle alone,” he added.

In the STEP 1 trial, almost 2,000 patients who were either overweight or living with obesity were randomized 2:1 to semaglutide, titrated up to 2.4 mg each week by week 16, or placebo in addition to lifestyle modification. After 68 weeks, those in the semaglutide group had a mean weight loss of 14.9%, compared with 2.4% in the placebo group.

Patients were also followed in a 1-year extension of the trial, published in Diabetes, Obesity, and Metabolism.

Within 1 year of stopping treatment, participants regained two thirds of the weight they had initially lost.

Hence, Dr. Bessesen stressed that a total rethink of how obesity is approached is needed among most physicians.

“I think in the future treating obesity with medications should be like treating hypertension and diabetes, something most primary care doctors are comfortable doing, but that’s going to take a little work and practice on the part of clinicians to really have a comfortable conversation about risks, and benefits, with patients,” he said.

“I would encourage primary care doctors to learn more about the treatment of obesity, and learn more about bias and stigma, and think about how they can deliver care that is compassionate and competent,” he concluded.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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