Litcius/Paper detail

The use of virtual visits for obesity pharmacotherapy in patients with overweight or obesity compared with in‐person encounters

Marcio L. Griebeler, W. Scott Butsch, Paloma Rodriguez, Laura D Lomeli, Matthew Kampert, Vinni Makin, Ula Abed Alwahab, Elena Borukh, Erin Daigle, James Bena, Kevin M. Pantalone, Bartolomé Burguera

2022Obesity20 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: with comorbidities or BMI ≥ 30 compared with the standard in-person approach over a 90-day period. METHODS: A 12-week, randomized, prospective, single-center, open label trial compared the use of virtual visits versus in-person visits for the treatment of obesity using phentermine. The primary end point was percentage mean change in body weight from baseline to 12 weeks. A noninferiority approach assuming a 3% noninferiority region was used to assess effect size differences. RESULTS: The weight loss in the virtual visit arm was noninferior to the in-person arm at all time points. At 12 weeks, the mean change in weight was -6.5% among the virtual group and -7.7% among the in-person group. In addition, 65% of virtual patients and 71% of in-person patients demonstrated a weight reduction of at least 5%. There was no difference in medication tolerance, adherence, and compliance. CONCLUSIONS: These results indicate that the virtual obesity pharmacotherapy visits in adults aged 18 to 65 years prescribed phentermine are effective and noninferior in achieving meaningful weight loss after 12 weeks. Future clinical trials are needed to better assess the effectiveness of televisits for obesity pharmacotherapy.

Topics & Concepts

PhentermineMedicineOverweightPharmacotherapyWeight lossObesityClinical trialRandomized controlled trialTelehealthClinical endpointPhysical therapyInternal medicineTelemedicineHealth careEconomicsEconomic growthPharmacology and Obesity TreatmentTreatment of Major DepressionMobile Health and mHealth Applications