4.7 Article

Cardiometabolic Disease Staging Predicts Effectiveness of Weight-Loss Therapy to Prevent Type 2 Diabetes: Pooled Results From Phase III Clinical Trials Assessing Phentermine/Topiramate Extended Release

Journal

DIABETES CARE
Volume 40, Issue 7, Pages 856-862

Publisher

AMER DIABETES ASSOC
DOI: 10.2337/dc17-0088

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Merit Review program of the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, National Institutes of Health (NIH) [DK-038765]
  2. University of Alabama at Birmingham Diabetes Research Center [P30-DK-079626]
  3. (Building Interdisciplinary Research Careers in Women's Health Program) from the Office of Research on Women's Health [K12-HD-052023]
  4. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) at the NIH
  5. (National Research Service Award) from the NICHD of the NIH [T32HD055163]

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OBJECTIVE To assess the ability of medication-assisted weight loss to prevent diabetes as a function of the baseline weighted Cardiometabolic Disease Staging (CMDS) score. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS We pooled data from 3,040 overweight and obese participants in three randomized controlled trials-CONQUER, EQUIP, and SEQUEL-assessing efficacy and safety of phentermine/topiramate extended release (ER) for weight loss. In these double-blind phase III trials, overweight/obese adult patients were treated with a lifestyle intervention and randomly assigned to placebo versus once-daily oral phentermine/topiramate ER. The weighted CMDS score was calculated using baseline quantitative clinical data including waist circumference, blood glucose, blood pressure, and blood lipids. Incident diabetes was defined based on serial measures of fasting glucose, 2-h oral glucose tolerance test glucose, and/or HbA(1c). RESULTS The absolute decrease in 1-year diabetes incidence rates in subjects treated with medication versus placebo was greatest in those with high-risk CMDS scores at baseline (10.43-6.29%), intermediate in those with moderate CMDS risk (4.67-2.37%), and small in the low-risk category (1.51-0.67%). The number of participants needed to treat to prevent one new case of diabetes over a 56-week period was 24, 43, and 120 in those with baseline CMDS scores of >= 60, 30-59, and 0-29, respectively. CONCLUSIONS Numbers needed to treat to prevent one case of type 2 diabetes are markedly lower in patients with high-risk scores. CMDS can be used to quantify risk of diabetes in overweight/obese individuals and predict the effectiveness of weight-loss therapy to prevent diabetes.

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