A randomized controlled trial of lorcaserin and lifestyle counselling for weight loss maintenance: changes in emotion- and stress-related eating, food cravings and appetite.
Ariana M ChaoT A WaddenRebecca L PearlN AlamuddinS M LeonardZ M BakizadaE PinkasavageK A GruberO A WalshR I BerkowitzN AlfarisJena Shaw TronieriPublished in: Clinical obesity (2018)
Anti-obesity medication may help people maintain diet-induced reductions in appetite. The present exploratory analysis assessed the effects of lorcaserin on changes at 24 weeks post-randomization in emotion- and stress-related eating, food cravings and other measures of appetite (i.e. binge eating, cognitive restraint, disinhibition, hunger, preoccupation with eating and fullness). The parent study investigated the efficacy of combined lorcaserin and behavioural treatment in facilitating weight loss maintenance (WLM) in 137 adults (mean age = 46.1 years, 86.1% female, 68.6% black) who had lost ≥5% of initial weight during a 14-week, low-calorie diet (LCD) run-in. Participants were randomly assigned to lorcaserin or placebo and were provided with group WLM counselling sessions. Emotion- and stress-related eating, food cravings and appetite were measured at the start of the LCD (week -14), randomization (0) and week 24. From randomization, lorcaserin-treated participants had significantly greater improvements in emotion- and stress-related eating compared to placebo-treated participants (P = 0.04). However, groups did not differ significantly after randomization in changes in the frequency of food cravings, binge eating or other measures of appetite (Ps > 0.05). Compared to placebo, lorcaserin may improve emotion- and stress-related eating.
Keyphrases
- weight loss
- bariatric surgery
- roux en y gastric bypass
- gastric bypass
- autism spectrum disorder
- depressive symptoms
- glycemic control
- weight gain
- stress induced
- physical activity
- clinical trial
- type diabetes
- human health
- body mass index
- skeletal muscle
- smoking cessation
- double blind
- hepatitis c virus
- newly diagnosed
- metabolic syndrome
- placebo controlled
- mass spectrometry
- phase iii
- heat stress
- adipose tissue
- replacement therapy
- preterm birth
- insulin resistance
- body weight