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Measures of adherence as predictors of early and total weight loss with intensive behavioral therapy for obesity combined with liraglutide 3.0 mg.

Behav Res Ther · 2020

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 150 adults with obesity, visit attendance and dietary self-monitoring were linked to weight loss over 52 weeks, explaining 14.8% and 14.9% of the variation, respectively. Among the 100 participants taking liraglutide 3.0 mg daily, medication adherence explained an additional 9.9% of the weight loss variation. Meal replacement adherence did not predict weight loss in the 50 participants using it.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalBehav Res Ther, 2020
Citations15
Relative citation ratio0.84
NIH percentile44
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Obesity

Abstract

Individual weight loss outcomes with intensive behavioral therapy (IBT) for obesity are variable. The present study assessed whether visit attendance, dietary self-monitoring, medication, and meal-replacement adherence were associated with 52-week weight loss with IBT and tested whether these relationships were independent of associations with early weight loss. This was a secondary analysis of a randomized trial in which 150 participants (76.1% female, 55.8% white, BMI = 38.8 ± 4.8 kg/m) received either IBT alone, IBT with liraglutide 3.0 mg/d, or IBT-liraglutide combined with a 12-week meal replacement diet (Multi-component). In the full sample, visit attendance accounted for 14.8% of the variance in 52-week weight loss and dietary self-monitoring added 14.9%. Only self-monitoring was independently associated with weight loss. In the 100 liraglutide-treated participants, medication adherence accounted for an additional 9.9% of the variance in 52-week weight loss, and both self-monitoring and medication adherence were independent correlates. For the 50 Multi-component participants, meal replacement adherence did not predict weight loss. Early weight loss was associated with higher early and subsequent session attendance and dietary self-monitoring. However, self-monitoring and medication adherence remained important correlates of total weight loss when controlling for this variable. Strategies that help improve self-monitoring consistency and medication usage could improve weight loss with IBT.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 32450367 ↗

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