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The metabolic effect of combined liraglutide treatment and lifestyle modification on obese adolescents in a tertiary center, Riyadh.

Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) · 2025

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 138 obese adolescents in Riyadh, those who combined the drug liraglutide with lifestyle changes saw a small but significant drop in BMI of 0.48 kg/m² over 6–9 months, along with reductions in total cholesterol, alkaline phosphatase, and LDL levels. A 0.13% decrease in blood sugar control (HbA1c) was also noted, though this may only matter for those with pre-diabetes. The benefits were strongest in the first 6–9 months and required ongoing lifestyle support to last.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalFront Endocrinol (Lausanne), 2025
Citations1
Molecules liraglutide
Conditions studied Obesity

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Obesity has increased in adolescents with a rising incidence of metabolic consequences, including type 2 diabetes, necessitating new pharmacotherapeutic approaches. Liraglutide is the first FDA-approved therapy for obesity in adolescents in less than a decade. We assessed its efficacy combined with lifestyle interventions in our patients. METHODS: A retrospective cohort study was conducted at a specialized children hospital in Riyadh (2019-2022). All patients had simple, non-syndromic obesity and received intensive education on lifestyle modification. Data was collected from patients in two groups: Lifestyle modification (LifeSG) Vs Lifestyle and Liraglutide (LiraglG). Comparisons of two repeated measures obtained at T1 (baseline) and T2 (6-9 months) or T3 (9-12 months), including changes in body mass index (BMI), glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) and other metabolic markers, were performed in the two matched groups using paired t-tests. Regression analysis using linear mixed models (SAS 9.4) were used to assess the effect of treatment status over time (P-value ≤ 0.05). RESULTS: Data collected from 138 patients (n=69 in each group) with mean BMI and HbA1c of 35.78 kg/m and 5.85%, respectively. Notably, BMI declined by 0.48 kg/m over time in the LiraglG (p=0.003). An interaction effect (p=0.027) suggested a treatment impact until the first follow-up, which was not sustained thereafter. LifeSG exhibited no significant changes in biomarkers throughout T1-T3 period. In contrast, significant reductions were observed in BMI between T1-T2 (p=0.0057) and T1-T3 (p=0.010), total cholesterol (T1-T2) (p=0.023), alkaline phosphatase (T1-T3) (p<0.05) and low-density lipoprotein mean levels (T1-T3) (p=0.05) in the LiraglG group. A decline of 0.13% in A1c was observed in LiraglG; which may not clinically meaningful except in patients with pre-diabetes range of A1c (≥ 5.8%). CONCLUSION: Liraglutide combined with lifestyle intervention is effective in treating obese Saudi adolescents, especially in the first 6-9 months. Continuous lifestyle intervention plays a key role in sustainability.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 40303643 ↗

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