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Evaluating appetite/satiety hormones and eating behaviours as predictors of weight loss maintenance with GLP-1RA therapy in adolescents with severe obesity.

Pediatr Obes · 2024

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 66 adolescents with severe obesity, researchers found that those with a lower leptin response to meals before starting the GLP-1 drug exenatide lost more weight and maintained it better over 52 weeks compared to those given a placebo. No other factors, such as age, sex, BMI, or eating behaviors, predicted weight loss maintenance with exenatide.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalPediatr Obes, 2024
Citations9
Relative citation ratio1.93
NIH percentile72
Molecules
Conditions studied Obesity

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Whilst glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP1-RAs) are effective for treating adolescent obesity, weight loss maintenance (WLM; preventing weight regain) remains a challenge. Our goal was to investigate appetite/satiety hormones and eating behaviours that may predict WLM with exenatide (a GLP1-RA) versus placebo in adolescents with severe obesity. METHODS: Adolescents who had ≥5% body mass index (BMI) reduction with meal replacement therapy were randomized to 52 weeks of once-weekly exenatide extended release or placebo. In this secondary analysis, eating behaviours and appetite/satiety regulation hormones post-meal replacement therapy (pre-randomization to exenatide or placebo) were evaluated as possible predictors of WLM. Percent change in BMI from randomization to 52 weeks served as the primary measure of WLM. RESULTS: The analysis included 66 adolescents (mean age 16.0 years; 47% female). Lower leptin response to meal testing was associated with greater WLM in terms of BMI percent change in those receiving exenatide compared to placebo (p = 0.007) after adjusting for sex, age and BMI. There were no other significant predictors of WLM. CONCLUSIONS: Prior to exenatide, lower leptin response to meals was associated with improved WLM with exenatide compared to placebo. The mostly null findings of this study suggest that GLP1-RA treatment may produce similar WLM for adolescents with obesity regardless of age, BMI, sex and eating behaviours.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 38339799 ↗