Sibutramine in the treatment of obesity in type 2 diabetic patients and in nondiabetic subjects
- PMID: 15660196
- DOI: 10.1007/s00592-004-0158-7
Sibutramine in the treatment of obesity in type 2 diabetic patients and in nondiabetic subjects
Abstract
Obesity is considered a chronic disease requiring treatment. The effect of sibutramine combined with hypocaloric diet and exercise on body weight, body fat mass, lipids, glycemic control, insulin secretion and insulin resistance was evaluated in a randomized, controlled, open-label study. A total of 44 obese type 2 diabetic patients (aged 45.2+/-5.2 years, BMI 33.62+/-2.2 kg/m(2)) and 49 obese nondiabetic subjects (aged 41.9+/-5.7 years, BMI 34.3+/-2.6 kg/m(2)) were treated with sibutramine for 3 months. Moreover, 39 age-matched obese type 2 diabetic patients and 41 obese nondiabetic subjects only on hypocaloric diet and exercise served as control groups. Insulin secretion was estimated during intravenous glucose tolerance test; insulin resistance was assessed by the HOMA index. There was a significant reduction in body weight in both sibutramine-treated diabetic patients (7.1%) and nondiabetic subjects (9.1%), accompanied by a significant reduction in body fat mass. HbA1c decreased significantly in the diabetic patients after sibutramine treatment. There was a significant improvement of lipid parameters in the two groups. Insulin resistance decreased by 21.9% in the sibutramine-treated diabetic patients and by 38.5% in the nondiabetic group. Weight loss was accompanied by an increase of 43.8% in first phase insulin secretion in the sibutramine-treated diabetic group; in the treated nondiabetic subjects there was a decrease in first and second phase insulin secretion and the area under the curve for total insulin secretion. In conclusion, sibutramine leads to a significant reduction in body weight, body fat mass and waist and hip circumferences; it improves insulin sensitivity, insulin secretion, glycaemic control and lipid parameters in both diabetic and nondiabetic obese subjects.
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