Mujahid Saeed
University Hospital Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, United Kingdom
Title: Weight loss: Non-surgical strategies through newer drug therapies
Biography
Biography: Mujahid Saeed
Abstract
There has been a flurry of anti-diabetic medications since 2005 and the list is ever-expanding. These newer therapies include, glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) analogues, dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DDP-4) inhibitors and sodium glucose co-transporter 2 (SGLT-2) inhibitors. Prior to their introduction, diabetes management was plagued by the invariable notorious side-effect of weight gain with the use of sulfonyl ureas (~2-3 kg), thiazolidinediones (~2–3 kg) and in particular with insulin (~4-10 kg). The latter group of medications remain a massive deterrent to both healthcare professionals in terms of prescribing and patients in respects to adherence as weight gain is undesirable and results in poor body image, depression, hypertension, hyperlipidaemia and an increased rate of micro- and macro-vascular diabetic complications. The newer therapies, apart from their anti-diabetic properties offer the desired effect of weight reduction (~2-3 kg) or at least weight neutrality (DDP-4 inhibitors). More recently, a GLP-1 analogue has been approved for management of obesity with promising efficacy (mean weight reduction of ~4-5 kg) in both non-diabetic and diabetic subjects. These newer therapies add to the armamentarium of therapies in addressing the global pandemic of diabetes and or obesity. Some of these offer other health benefits including a reduction in systolic and diastolic blood pressure (~4/2 mm of Hg) and improvement in some markers of hyperlipidaemia. The mechanisms through which weight loss is targeted, the data from the trials and the use of these newer agents in medically managing the ever-increasing tide of diabetes and obesity will be examined.