Efficacy of High-Dose Liraglutide as an Adjunct for Weight Loss in Patients with Prior Bariatric Surgery.
Obes Surg · 2018
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of 20 patients who had previous weight-loss surgery, taking 3.0 mg of liraglutide daily led to a median weight loss of 7.1% after 16 weeks and 9.7% after 28 weeks. Their median BMI decreased by 3.5 kg/m² at 16 weeks and 4.7 kg/m² at 28 weeks. No major side effects were reported during the study.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Obes Surg, 2018 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 75 |
| Relative citation ratio | 3.31 |
| NIH percentile | 86 |
| Molecules | liraglutide |
| Conditions studied | Obesity |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Bariatric surgery is the most effective long-term treatment of severe obesity. Unfortunately, many patients experience inadequate weight loss, weight plateau, or weight recidivism. We sought to determine the efficacy of high-dose liraglutide (3.0 mg once daily) in patients with prior bariatric surgery.
METHODS: We performed a retrospective chart review of 33 consecutive patients, aged 18-65, who received liraglutide for weight loss in the setting of any previous bariatric surgery. Indications were weight recidivism (> 10% weight regain from lowest post-surgical weight), inadequate weight loss (< 20% weight loss from initial clinic assessment, or pre-surgical weight if unavailable), and plateau (patient desires further weight loss but does not fit into either other category). Our primary outcomes were median percentage weight loss and median BMI change at 16 and 28 weeks, inclusive of time taken to titrate the medication to target dose. Secondary outcomes were the presence of adverse effects and the need to discontinue the medication.
RESULTS: Of a total of 33 patients identified, 20 met inclusion criteria and had adequate data to be included in our analysis. At 16 weeks median percentage weight loss was 7.1% (IQR 5.1-12.2%), and at 28 weeks 9.7% (IQR 7.8-13.9%). Median BMI change was 3.5 kg/m (16 weeks, IQR 2.2-4.6 kg/m) and 4.7 kg/m (28 weeks, IQR 3.7-5.6 kg/m). There were no major adverse events.
CONCLUSIONS: High-dose liraglutide is an effective adjunct treatment for weight loss in patients with prior bariatric surgery.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 30022424 ↗
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