4.7 Article

Medicines for Obesity: Appraisal of Clinical Studies with Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation Tool

Journal

NUTRIENTS
Volume 15, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nu15030606

Keywords

obesity; GRADE evaluation; clinical pharmacology; clinical evidence

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We used the GRADE tool to evaluate the quality of evidence from phase III/IV clinical trials of drugs against obesity. Our systematic review assessed the quality of clinical evidence from existing trials, rather than the pharmacological efficacy of anti-obesity therapies. We found that the overall quality of clinical evidence from anti-obesity trials ranged from low to moderate, with most trials affected by publication bias, and some trials having a risk of bias due to lack of blinding in treatment.
We evaluated the quality of evidence from phase III/IV clinical trials of drugs against obesity using the principles of Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development, and Evaluation (GRADE) tool. Our systematic review evaluates the quality of clinical evidence from existing clinical trials and not the pharmacological efficacy of anti-obesity therapies. A literature search using select keywords in separate was performed in PubMed and ClinicalTrials.gov databases for phase III/IV clinical trials during the last ten years. Our findings indicate that the quality of existing clinical evidence from anti-obesity trials generally ranges from low to moderate. Most trials suffered from publication bias. Less frequently, trials suffered from the risk of bias mainly due to lack of blindness in the treatment. Our work indicates that additional higher-quality clinical trials are needed to gain more confidence in the estimate of the effect of currently used anti-obesity medicines, to allow more informed clinical decisions, thus reducing the risk of implementing potentially ineffective or even harmful therapeutic strategies.

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