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Resistant and Refractory Obesity: The Complexity of Anti-Obesity Therapy Failure.

Int J Mol Sci · 2026

Last updated 2026-05-28

Anti-obesity medications (AOMs) can fail for many reasons, including psychiatric conditions like depression or anxiety, limited healthcare access, high costs, and lifestyle factors such as low physical activity. Other issues like drug-phenotype mismatches, counterfeit products, genetic differences, or immune responses (such as antidrug antibodies) may also reduce effectiveness. Even other medications or endocrine disorders can weaken the weight-loss effects of these drugs. The review highlights the need to identify these factors before treatment to help predict who may not respond well.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalInt J Mol Sci, 2026
Citations0
Molecules
Conditions studied Obesity

Abstract

Pharmacotherapy is a key component of obesity management, yet treatment failure remains a prevalent challenge in clinical practice. Such failure may present as insufficient pharmacological response, early discontinuation, or post-treatment weight regain, underscoring the discrepancy between clinical trial efficacy and real-world outcomes. The effectiveness of anti-obesity medications (AOMs) is influenced by psychiatric comorbidities, including depression, anxiety, and disordered eating patterns, as well as environmental and socioeconomic factors such as limited healthcare access, weight-related stigma, and high medication costs. Individual characteristics, including physical activity, body composition, visceral adiposity, and microbiome profile, further modulate treatment outcomes. Pharmacokinetic and pharmacotherapeutic limitations such as drug-phenotype mismatch, route of administration, suboptimal formulations, and exposure to counterfeit products also compromise efficacy. No less important are genetic and immunological factors, comprising pharmacogenomic variants of both incretin and melanocortin receptors along with antidrug antibodies (ADAs), which may constitute therapy resistance. Concomitant medications and comorbid endocrine disorders can additionally attenuate weight-loss effects. The objective of this review is to characterize the multifactorial nature of resistance and refractoriness to anti-obesity therapy, and the importance of identifying pretreatment predictive factors for recognizing individuals at risk of inadequate or lack of response, thereby enabling personalized management strategies and improving long-term clinical outcomes, particularly in "difficult-to-treat" patients.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 41898403 ↗