Obesity Clinical Trial
To determine the long-term efficacy of the combination therapy of phentermine and fenfluramine in conjunction with diet, exercise, and behavior modification in the treatment of simple, moderate obesity.
BACKGROUND:
Obesity is a problem of significant public health concern both in this and other western
countries. One reason is that it is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease, most notably
hypertension. For example, in the Framingham study it was found that relative body weight,
weight change during observation, and skin fold thickness were related to existing blood
pressure levels and to the subsequent rate of development of hypertension. Additionally, for
previously normotensive individuals, the risk of developing hypertension was proportional to
the degree of overweight. Obesity is also a major risk factor for type II diabetes mellitus.
On the other hand, some overweight individuals are physically healthy but suffer from the
psychosocial consequences of their condition so that losing weight would be desirable for
them as well as for individuals more at risk for physical illness.
Like essential hypertension, obesity is not only a chronic condition for many individuals
but it is also a heterogeneous condition with many underlying causes and interacting
factors. It is generally difficult to treat because it is a chronic problem, success comes
slowly, and physicians in practice generally understand the condition rather poorly and do
not manage it well. Results from studies of caloric restriction, behavior modification and
medication have often been disappointing both to the subjects and their physicians. In
practice, dropout rates from exercise programs, as well as various dietary self-help
programs have been relatively high.
Similarly, in clinical trials dropout rates have often been quite high. Compounding the
problem of weight management has been a rather universal negative bias on the part of
physicians to prescribing anorexiant medications. It was previously generally held that
these agents were either only effective in the short term or not at all. Additionally, there
has always been concern about the potential adverse effects of anorexiants as well as their
potential for abuse. Physicians who used appetite suppressants often prescribed them for
only four to six weeks which was inappropriate in the management of a chronic condition.
In several relatively short term clinical trials (e.g., 16 weeks), it has been shown that
appetite control medications such as fenfluramine and phentermine were more effective than
placebo in inducing weight loss. It has been less clear from the trials performed heretofore
how effective anorectic medications were when used as an adjunct to behavior modification
and diet. This aspect was addressed in the first two years of the clinical trial under
consideration here.
A second controversial issue concerned the duration of efficacy of anorexiant agents.
Originally it was felt that tolerance developed, hence the recommendations for short courses
of treatment. A few long-term double-blind studies using anorexiants have since demonstrated
that they exert beneficial effects for up to 24 weeks, as evidenced by weight loss and
maintenance of weight loss. This was an important finding given, as noted earlier, the
chronicity of the problem of obesity.
The so-called stimulant anorexiants, like phentermine, are believed to act via central
catecholamine mechanisms. Side-effects include nervousness, insomnia, increased motor
activity and cardiovascular disturbances such as tachycardia and elevation of blood
pressure. The latter effects led physicians to feel that their use in obese hypertensive
patients was very limited. Fenfluramine, although chemically related to the stimulant
anorexiants, appears to act via serotonergic mechanisms. It reportedly causes sedation,
occasionally diarrhea and few cardiovascular effects.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
Double-blind, fixed sample. After a six-week single-blind placebo controlled diet and
behavior modification period, participants entered a parallel-group comparison of
fenfluramine plus phentermine versus placebo. In the third and fourth years of the study,
patients were randomly assigned to either continuous therapy or intermittent therapy. The
intermittent therapy group received the medication for three months from April through June
and during the period between Thanksgiving and New Year's day.
The study completion date listed in this record was obtained from the Query/View/Report
(QVR) System.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Parallel Assignment, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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