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[Obesity treatment: will pharmacotherapies replace metabolic surgery in the future?]

Inn Med (Heidelb) · 2023

Last updated 2026-05-28

Obesity is a long-term disease linked to other health problems, and treatment typically starts with diet, exercise, and behavior changes. If these don’t work, options include very low-calorie diets, weight-loss medications, or surgery. Current medications don’t achieve the same average weight loss as surgery, but newer medications may change how obesity is treated in the future.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalInn Med (Heidelb), 2023
Citations1
Relative citation ratio0.04
NIH percentile4
Molecules
Conditions studied Obesity, Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

Obesity is a chronically progressing disease that represents a major challenge for affected patients, health care professionals and society, since it is highly prevalent and associated with several comorbidities. The treatment of obesity aims at body weight reduction, reducing the burden of comorbidities and weight maintenance after weight loss. To achieve these goals, a conservative treatment strategy is recommended that consists of an energy-reduced diet, increased physical activity and behavioral modifications. If individual treatment targets cannot be achieved by basic treatment, stepwise therapy intensification should be initiated including short-term very low calorie diets, pharmacotherapy or bariatric surgery. However, these treatment approaches differ with respect to average weight loss and other outcomes. There is still a large gap between the efficacy of conservative strategies and "metabolic" surgery that cannot be filled by current pharmacotherapies. However, recent advances in the development of anti-obesity medications could change the positioning of pharmacotherapies in obesity management. Here we discuss whether next-generation pharmacotherapies have the potential to become an alternative to obesity surgery in the future.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 37286802 ↗