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Diabetes
medication and lifestyle changes can help
treat weight gain Induced by antipsychotic
drugs
Newswise — Lifestyle
intervention and the drug metformin are both
effective against antipsychotic-induced
weight gain, and treatment is most effective
when the two therapies are combined,
according to a study in the January 9/16
issue of JAMA.
Atypical antipsychotic
(AAP) medications have been used
increasingly for the management of patients
with a variety of psychotic disorders and
severe behavioral disturbances.
But in the past decade,
there has been a growing concern among
clinicians and researchers that use of AAP
medications may be related to potentially
serious adverse metabolic effects, including
weight gain, hyperlipidemia (high fat levels
in the blood), and glucose intolerance.
Metformin is a drug
used to treat type 2 diabetes. It inhibits
glucose production, is well tolerated, and
prevents continual weight gain while it
decreases measures of insulin resistance.
Some studies find that
metformin can reduce body weight in patients
with type 2 diabetes and in obese people who
do not have diabetes, according to
background information in the article.
Ren-Rong Wu, M.D., of
the Mental Health Institute of the Second
Xiangya Hospital, Central South University,
China, and colleagues conducted a randomized
controlled trial from October 2004 to
December 2006 to test the efficacy of
lifestyle intervention and metformin alone
and in combination for antipsychotic-induced
weight gain and abnormalities in insulin
sensitivity.
The study included a
total of 128 adult patients with
schizophrenia. Participants who gained more
than ten percent of their pre-drug weight
were assigned to one of four treatment
groups.
The patients continued
their antipsychotic medication and were
randomly assigned to 12 weeks of placebo,
750 milligrams per day of metformin alone,
750 milligrams per day of metformin with
lifestyle intervention, or lifestyle
intervention alone.
Lifestyle interventions
included psycho-educational, dietary, and
exercise programs.
“In this 12-week study,
we found statistically significant decreases
in mean weight, BMI [body mass index], waist
circumference, insulin, and IRI [insulin
resistance index] among patients in the
lifestyle-plus-metformin, metformin-alone,
and lifestyle-plus-placebo groups, but not
among those in the placebo-alone group whose
measurements continued to increase,” the
authors write.
Those taking metformin
in combination with lifestyle intervention
had average decreases of 1.8 in BMI, 3.6 in
IRI, and two centimeters in waist
circumference.
Those taking metformin
alone showed average decreases of 1.2 in
BMI, 3.5 in IRI, and 1.3 centimeters in
waist circumference. In the
lifestyle-plus-placebo group, participants
had average decreases of 0.5 in BMI, and 1.0
in IRI.
Participants in the
placebo group continued to show increases in
all measures: 1.2 in BMI, 0.4 in IRI, and
2.2 centimeters in waist circumference.
“Lifestyle intervention
and metformin alone and in combination
demonstrated efficacy for
antipsychotic-induced weight gain. Lifestyle
intervention plus metformin showed the best
effect on weight loss,” the authors
conclude.
“Metformin alone was
more effective in weight loss and improving
insulin sensitivity than lifestyle
intervention alone.”