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Weight reduction and long-term maintenance after 18 months treatment with orlistat for obesity.

Author: Krempf M, Louvet JP, Allanic H, Miloradovich T, Joubert JM, Attali JR

Author affiliation: CHU Hotel-Dieu, Service d'Endocrinologie-Nutrition, Nantes, France. mkemppf@sante.univ-nantes.fr

Publication date & source: 2003.05, Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord., 27(5):591-7.

Publication type: Clinical Trial; Multicenter Study; Randomized Controlled Trial; Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

OBJECTIVE: To determine the effect of orlistat on weight reduction and the long-term maintenance of this weight loss when associated with a continuous mildly reduced energy diet. DESIGN: A multicenter, 18-month, double-blind study conducted in 81 hospital centers. Patients were randomized to orlistat 120 mg or placebo three times daily in conjunction with a mildly reduced-energy diet maintained throughout the study. SUBJECTS: In total, 696 otherwise healthy, overweight patients aged 18-65 y (BMI >or=28 kg/m(2)) were randomized to treatment with orlistat (n=346) or placebo (n=350). MEASUREMENTS: Body weight, anthropometry, lipid and glycemic control parameters and blood pressure. RESULTS: After 18 months, patients treated with orlistat lost significantly more body weight compared with placebo (-6.5+/-0.8 vs -3.0+/-0.8%; P=0.0005). After 12 months, 32.9% of orlistat vs 24.5% of placebo patients lost >or=10% of their initial weight (P=0.04). A significantly greater number of patients receiving orlistat treatment maintained this >or=10% weight loss compared to those receiving placebo (28.1 vs 13.8%; P<0.0001). Compared with placebo, orlistat was associated with a greater decrease in fasting blood glucose (-0.86+/-0.12 vs -0.29+/-0.18 mmol/l; P<0.05) and LDL-cholesterol (-13.0+/-1.3 vs -7.0+/-1.3%; P<0.001). CONCLUSION: A clinically meaningful reduction in body weight and the maintenance of this weight loss is achievable with orlistat treatment and dietary restriction over a period of 18 months. This weight loss resulted in an improvement in risk factors for coronary heart disease.



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