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Risk factors, prevention and treatment of weight gain associated with the use of antidepressants and antipsychotics: a state-of-the-art clinical review.

Marco SolmiAlessandro MiolaFederico CaponeSimone PallottinoMikkel HojlundJoseph FirthDan J SiskindRichard Ig HoltOlivier CorbeilSamuele CorteseElena DragiotiEbba Du RietzRene Ernst NielsenMerete NordentoftPaolo Fusar-PoliCatharina A HartmanAnne HøyeAi KoyanagiHenrik LarssonKelli LehtoPeter LindgrenMirko ManchiaKarolina Skonieczna-ŻydeckaBrendon StubbsDavy VancampfortEduard VietaHeidi TaipaleChristoph U Correll
Published in: Expert opinion on drug safety (2024)
To prevent, manage, and treat antidepressant/antipsychotic-related weight gain, we recommend i) assessing risk factors for obesity before treatment, ii) monitoring metabolic health at baseline and regularly during follow-up, iii) offering lifestyle interventions including regular exercise and healthy diet based on patient preference to optimize motivation, iv) considering first-line psychotherapy for mild-moderate depression and anxiety disorders, v) choosing medications based on medications' and patient's weight gain risk, vi) choosing medications based on acute vs long-term treatment, vii) using effective, tolerated medications, viii) switching to less weight-inducing antipsychotics/antidepressants where possible, ix) using early weight gain as a predictor of further weight gain to inform the timing of intervention/switch options, and x) considering adding metformin or glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists, or topiramate (second-line due to potential adverse cognitive effects) to antipsychotics, or aripiprazole to clozapine or olanzapine.
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