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A systematic review of the economic value proposition for commercially available nonsurgical weight-loss interventions.

Obesity (Silver Spring) · 2023

Last updated 2026-05-28

A review of 20 studies found mixed evidence on whether common weight-loss methods like medications (e.g., semaglutide, liraglutide) or programs (e.g., Weight Watchers) provide good value for money. Ten out of twenty medication comparisons showed cost-effectiveness, while only four out of twelve non-medication comparisons did, with five claiming cost savings but with weak evidence. The study highlights concerns about the quality of these economic claims.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalObesity (Silver Spring), 2023
Citations5
Relative citation ratio0.62
NIH percentile35
Molecules
Conditions studied Obesity

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The study aim was to review the economic evaluation literature of commercially available and effective nonsurgical weight-loss interventions to investigate whether there is evidence to support claims of cost-effectiveness (i.e., good value for money) or cost savings (i.e., a positive return on investment). METHODS: Relevant databases were systematically reviewed to identify economic evaluations of commercially available weight-loss products and services shown to result in clinically significant weight loss. Five weight-loss medications (orlistat, liraglutide, naltrexone-bupropion, semaglutide, and phentermine-topiramate), two meal replacement programs (Jenny Craig, Optifast), and one behavioral intervention (Weight Watchers [WW]) that met inclusion criteria were identified. After screening, 32 relevant comparisons of cost-effectiveness or cost savings across 20 studies were identified. RESULTS: Ten of twenty pharmaceutical comparisons showed evidence of cost-effectiveness based on established thresholds. Four of twelve nonpharmaceutical comparisons provided evidence of cost-effectiveness, and five made claims of cost savings. However, methodological concerns cast doubt on the robustness of these claims. CONCLUSIONS: Evidence of cost-effectiveness for commercially available, evidence-based, nonsurgical weight-loss interventions is mixed. There is no evidence for cost-saving weight-loss medications and only weak evidence for behavioral and weight-loss interventions. Results provide a call to action to generate more robust evidence of the economic value proposition for these interventions.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 37231621 ↗