SAN FRANCISCO — An estimated two out of five adult women in the United States have obesity, and given the potential challenges of losing pregnancy weight postpartum or staving off the weight gain associated with menopause, women are likely to be receptive toward weight management help from their ob.gyns. A whole new armamentarium of anti-obesity medications has become available in the past decade, providing physicians and patients with more treatment options.
Ob.gyns. are therefore well-poised to offer counseling and treatment for obesity management for their patients, Johanna G. Finkle, MD, clinical assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology and a weight management specialist at the University of Kansas Heath System, told attendees at the annual clinical and scientific meeting of the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Dr. Finkle provided an extensive overview of what ob.gyns. need to know if they are interested in prescribing anti-obesity medications or simply providing their patients with information about the available drugs.
Kitila S. Heyward, MD, an ob.gyn. at Atrium Health in Monroe, North Carolina, who attended the talk, tries to prescribe anti-obesity medications but has run into roadblocks that Dr. Finkle’s talk helped her understand how to overcome.
“I thought it was very helpful because [I] and one of my midwives, in practice, have been trying to get things prescribed, and we can’t figure out the loopholes,” Dr. Heyward said. “Also, the failure rates are really helpful to us so that we know how to counsel people.”
Even for clinicians who aren’t prescribing these medications, Dr. Heyward said the talk was illuminating. “It offered a better understanding of the medications that your patients are on and how it can affect things like birth control, management of surgery, pregnancy, and things along those lines from a clinical day-by-day standpoint,” she said.
Starting With the Basics
Dr. Finkle began by emphasizing the importance of using patient-first language in discussing obesity, which means using terms such as “weight, excess weight, overweight, body mass index,” and “affected by obesity” instead of “obese, morbidly obese, heaviness, or large.” She also cited the Obesity Medicine Association’s definition of obesity: “a chronic, relapsing and treatable multifactorial, neurobehavioral disease, wherein an increase in body fat promotes adipose tissue dysfunction and abnormal fat mass physical forces, resulting in adverse metabolic, biomechanical, and psychosocial health consequences.”
Though Dr. Finkle acknowledged the limitations of relying on BMI for defining obesity, it remains the standard tool in current practice, with a BMI of 25-29.9 defining overweight and a BMI of 30 or greater defining obesity. Other diagnostic criteria for obesity in women, however, include a percentage body fat over 32% or a waist circumference of more than 35 inches.
“Women are at risk for weight gain through their entire lifespan” Dr. Finkle said, and in women with polycystic ovarian syndrome, 60%-80% have pre-obesity or obesity. In menopause, the triple threat of decreased estrogen, decreased activity, and changes in diet all contribute to obesity risk and no evidence suggests that hormone therapy can prevent weight gain.
Healthy nutrition, physical activity, and behavioral modification remain key pillars of weight management, but interventions such as surgery or medications are also important tools, she said.
“One size does not fit all in terms of treatment,” Dr. Finkle said. ”When I talk to a patient, I think about other medical complications that I can treat with these medications.”
Women for whom anti-obesity medications may be indicated are those with a BMI of 30 or greater, and those with a BMI of at least 27 along with at least one obesity-related comorbidity, such as hypertension, high cholesterol, diabetes, or sleep apnea. The goal of treating obesity with medication is at least a 5%-10% reduction of body weight.