Overweight and Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Multicenter, Randomized, Double-blind, Placebo-controlled Trial to Determine the Efficacy of Two Fixed Dose Combination of Metformin/Fluoxetin 1000/40 mg vs. 1700/40 mg in the Management of Overweight and Obesity
Clinical trial, multicenter, double-blind, placebo-controlled, comparative of three parallel
groups, randomized treatment to assess the efficacy and safety using a fixed dose combination
of metformin hydrochloride with fluoxetine as adjunctive treatment in patient with obesity or
overweight in order to generate new knowledge and give a greater number of therapeutic
options to the clinicians, one group will receive metformin 1700 mg and 40 mg of fluoxetine;
Another group will receive metformin 1000 mg with 40 mg of fluoxetine, and a third group
called control will receive placebo.
The above described treatments will be administered according to the "Dosage Schedule" The
three groups will receive tablets of physical characteristics equal to the reference drug to
preserve the blinding.
Overweight and obesity are serious health problems that affect population around the world.
According to information of the World Health Organization (WHO) in 2014 more than 1.9 billion
of inhabitants older than 18 years had overweight, of which 600 million were obese, i.e., 39%
of adults at global level present overweight and 13% of adults suffer obesity.
Overweight and obesity are considered complex and multifactorial diseases associated with the
development of multiple co-morbidities such as certain types of cancer, cardiovascular
diseases (CVD), disability, diabetes mellitus type 2 (DM2), disease of gallbladder,
osteoarthritis, high blood pressure (Hypertension), sleep apnea and cerebrovascular disease
(CD), making it the fifth leading cause of death worldwide , and is therefore considered a
pandemic.
Obesity is defined as the increase of the weight body associated to an imbalance in the
proportions of the different components of the body, in which mainly, the mass fat increases
with abnormal distribution in the body.The Body Mass Index (BMI) is the standard most widely
used for the classification of the somatotype in the people, and therefore the identification
of obesity. BMI is obtained through by dividing the weight in kilograms between heights in
squared meters. The classification of the BMI for White, Hispanic, and African-American adult
people has been approved by the National Institute of Heart, Lung and Blood, the WHO, the
American Association of Heart, the American College of Cardiology and the Obesity Society,
whose classification is the following:
The weight body is determined by the balance energy, which represents the difference between
the intake of energy through the food and the expenditure of energy coming of physical
activity of an individual. For the maintenance of a stable body weight, the energy intake
must be equal to energy expenditure, that's when weight gain happens, when the intake exceeds
expenditure, which produces a positive energy balance. On the other hand, weight loss occurs
when energy expenditure exceeds the caloric intake.
Although the low expenditure of energy represents one of the main factors that produce an
increase in the weight, there are multiple factors that play an important role. These factors
include genetic predisposition of the individual, physical inactivity and sedentary behavior,
socio-economic factors, as well as emotional factors and consumption of certain types of
drugs.
Due to the multiple factors that have an influence in the development of overweight and
obesity, the treatment is complex, because there must be some type of treatment by a
multidisciplinary team that achieve the control of each one of the factors that condition
obesity of each individual.
Traditional treatments for loss weight have been given in the education of the individual on
the preference for healthy foods, prescription diets and the implementation of programs of
physical activity. However, various studies have shown that this type of intervention has few
effects in long term, so the incorporation of new strategies as adjuvants in the loss of
weight have been developed, which include surgical techniques and pharmacological therapies.
According to the guidelines for obesity, the drug treatment therapy should be recommended in
individuals with a BMI ≥30 kg/m2 or with a BMI of ≥27 kg/m2 and the presence of a
comorbidity. 6. The use of pharmacological therapies must always be used as adjuvants to
changes in lifestyle, and must be approved by health authorities of each country. Before
2012, phentermine and orlistat were the unique medications available for the treatment of
obesity in the United States; however in 2015 the Repertoire of pharmacological agents
available to treat the obesity was extended and incorporated 4 new drugs: lorcaserin,
phentermine / topiramate of prolonged release, naltrexone / wellbutrin of prolonged release
and liraglutide. These new drugs share a common strategy to promote weight loss that controls
hunger and satiation at the level of the central nervous system (CNS), besides that most of
them have been previously used for the treatment of a medical condition other than obesity.
The amount of weight lost that is achieved through the use of these agents, usually goes from
3 to 10% of the initial weight and requires a continuous to hold the loss of weight. In
addition, each of these drugs has a unique profile of adverse events that should be
considered deeply prior to be indicated.
Due to the above, the search for new drug therapies for the obesity treatment is one of the
priorities in the research. Some drugs developed for different therapeutic indications have
shown significant effects on weight loss, which include metformin hydrochloride and
fluoxetine
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