4.7 Article

Antiobesity Medication Use in 2.2 Million Adults Across Eight Large Health Care Organizations: 2009-2015

Journal

OBESITY
Volume 27, Issue 12, Pages 1975-1981

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/oby.22581

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI) [CDRN-1306-04681 Phase II]
  2. NIH/National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences Colorado Clinical and Translational Science Award [UL1 TR001082]
  3. Veterans Affairs (VA) Advanced Fellowship Program in Health Services Research and Development
  4. Advanced Fellowship in Geriatrics from the Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Center, VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System
  5. [P30 DK048520]
  6. [T32 DK007446]

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Objective The aim of this study was to examine the prescribing patterns and use of antiobesity medications in a large cohort of patients using data from electronic health records. Methods Pharmacy- and patient-level electronic health record data were obtained on 2,248,407 adults eligible for weight-loss medications from eight geographically dispersed health care organizations. Results A total of 29,964 patients (1.3% of total cohort) filled at least one weight-loss medication prescription. This cohort was 82.3% female, with median age 44.9 years and median BMI 37.2 kg/m(2). Phentermine accounted for 76.6% of all prescriptions, with 51.7% of prescriptions being filled for >= 120 days and 33.8% filled for >= 360 days. There was an increase of 32.9% in medication days for all medications in 2015 compared with 2009. Higher prescription rates were observed in women, black patients, and patients in higher BMI classes. Of 3,919 providers who wrote at least one filled prescription, 23.8% (n = 863) were frequent prescribers who wrote 89.6% of all filled prescriptions. Conclusions Weight-loss medications are rarely prescribed to eligible patients. Phentermine accounted for > 75% of all medication days, with a majority of patients filling it for more than 4 months. Less than one-quarter of prescribing providers accounted for approximately 90% of all prescriptions.

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