Title: Clinical Diagnosis and Effective Management Strategies
1Clinical Diagnosis and Effective Management
Strategies
2What Do We Know About Obesity
- Prevalence continues to rise at alarming rate
among adults, children and adolescents. Most
common medical problem seen in primary care
office. - Is a major cause of preventable death.
- Causes over 40 medical problems affecting 9 organ
systems. - Morbidity and mortality rise with increasing BMI.
3How Are We Doing as a Medical Profession?
Obesity is under-diagnosed and under-treated
4Identification Counseling
- Summary of studies
- We are failing to adequately identify the
overweight and mildly obese patient missed
opportunities for early prevention and treatment - We are doing a better job identifying the
moderately and severely obese patient presenting
with co-morbid conditions, particularly type 2
diabetes, hypertension and hyperlipidemia
5Percent of Patients Receiving PCP Advice by
Obesity Classification
Told Overweight 2 (test for linear trend)
16.5, p 0.001 Gave Weight Loss Advise 2 (test
for linear trend) 5.5, p 0.019
Simkin-Silverman LR et al. Prev Med 20054071-82.
6Screening for Obesity in Adults
- The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF)
recommends that clinicians screen all adult
patients for obesity and offer intensive
counseling and behavioral interventions to
promote sustained weight loss for obese adults. - Grade B Recommendation
Ann Intern Med 2003139930-932.
7Identification and Treatment of Obesity
- Clinical Inertia
- Failure of the health care providers to initiate
or intensify therapy when indicated - Obesity failure to identify the condition
- Lack of education, training, and practice
organization aimed at evaluating treating
obesity as a chronic illness - Practice barriers
- Attitudes of futility, lack of perceived benefit
and unrewarding
Adapted from Phillips et al. Ann Intern Med 2001.
8Barriers to Obesity Care
- Counseling is unlikely to be effective without
understanding the barriers that patients,
providers, and systems face and applying targeted
strategies to overcome those behaviors.
Stange et al. Am J Prev Med 2002.
9Providing Obesity Care
The Patient Knowledge Attitudes Expectations Deman
ds Motivation
The Practice Environment Payment Structure Type
of Visit Alternative Demands Availability of Staff
The Clinician Time Reimbursement Training Interest
Type of Visit
Clinician Delivery of Obesity Care
Adapted from Jaen et al. J Fam Prac, 1994.
10Developing a Chronic Care Model of Care (A
Systems Approach)
- Put Prevention Into Practice
- AHRQ
- www.ahrq.gov
- Improving Chronic Illness Care
- http//improvingchroniccare.org
- Chronic care training manual
- ICIC Improving your practice manual
- Tools
11Provision of Obesity Care
- Three factors necessary for physicians to
intervene - Adequate recognition of obesity as a medical
problem - Willingness to provide intervention
- Adequate skills or resources to do so
Kristeller Hoerr. Prev Med 1997.
12Obesity Treatment Guidelines
www.nhlbi.nih.gov
www.naaso.org
13Obesity Treatment Recommendations
14The Office Visit
The Evaluation Process Consists of 6 Action Steps
- Measure weight, height, waist circumference and
record body mass index (BMI) - Categorize obesity classification and risk
- Take a comprehensive history, physical exam,
lab tests for medical condition - Assess need for treatment
- Broach the subject
- Assess readiness for treatment
The Practical Guide, 2000.
15Body Mass Index Chart
Weight (lbs)
Height
16BMI-Associated Disease Risk
Additional risks Large waist circumference
(men gt 40 in women gt 35 in) Poor aerobic
fitness Specific races and ethnic groups
Clinical Guidelines on the Identification,
Evaluation, and Treatment of Overweight and
Obesity in AdultsThe Evidence Report. Obes Res
19986(suppl 2).
17Fatness, Fitness, and Cardiovascular Disease
Mortality
8
Aerobically fit
7
Unfit
6
5
Relative Risk of CVD Mortality
4
3
2
1
Lean
Normal
Obese
lt 16.7
16.7 24.9
? 25
Body Fat Category ( Weight as Fat)
Lee et al. Am J Clin Nutr 199969373.
18Action BMI Ranges forAsian Populations are Lower
High to very high risk
WHO expert consultation. Lancet 2004363157.
19Systems Review
- Respiratory
- Dyspnea
- Obstructive Sleep Apnea
- Hypoventilation Syndrome
- Pickwickian Syndrome
- Asthma
- Endocrine
- Metabolic Syndrome
- Type 2 diabetes
- Dyslipidemia
- Polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS)/androgenicity
- Amenorrhea/infertility menstrual disorders
- Cardiovascular
- Hypertension
- Congestive Heart Failure
- Cor Pulmonale
- Varicose Veins
- Pulmonary Embolism
- Coronary Artery Disease
- Neurologic
- Stroke
- Idiopathic intracranial hypertension
- Meralgia paresthetica
- Psychological
- Depression
- Body image disturbance
- Stigmatization
Kushner and Roth. Endo Metab Clinics N Am 2003.
20Systems Review
- Gastrointestinal
- GERD
- Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD)
- Cholelithiasis
- Hernias
- Colon cancer
- Genitourinary
- Urinary stress incontinence
- Obesity-related glomerulopathy
- Kidney stones
- Hypogonadism (M)
- Breast and uterine cancer
- Kidney cancer
- Pregnancy complications
- Musculoskeletal
- Hyperuricemia and gout
- Immobility
- Osteoarthritis (knees/hips)
- Low back pain
- Carpal tunnel syndrome
- Integument
- Striae distensae (stretch marks)
- Stasis pigmentation of legs
- Cellulitis
- Acanthosis nigricans/skin tags
- Intertrigo, carbuncles
21The Metabolic Syndrome
ATP III, Executive Summary, 2001.
22Importance of Measuring Waist Circumference BMI
25 29.9 (Overweight)
Janssen et al. Arch Intern Med 20021622074-9.
NHANES III.
23Importance of Measuring Waist Circumference BMI
18.5 24.9 (Healthy)
Janssen et al. Arch Intern Med 20021622074-9.
NHANES III.
24Visceral AdiposityThe Critical Adipose Depot
25Classification of Overweight and Obesity by BMI,
Waist Circumference and Associated Disease Risks
Clinical Guidelines on the Identification,
Evaluation, and Treatment of Overweight and
Obesity in AdultsThe Evidence Report. Obes Res
19986(suppl 2).
26Percentage of Men with Metabolic Triad
Classified on Basis of Waist Girth and TG Level
waist lt 90
90 lt waist lt 100
waist gt 100
Lemieux et al. Circ 2000102179.
27Metabolic Risk Identified by Hypertriglyceridemic
Waist
waist
TG
waist
TG
waist
TG
waist
TG
Insulin Resistance (HOMA)
Waist 95 cm M 88 cm F TG 128
mg/dl
Men
Men
Women
Women
Age 18-34
Age 55-74
Kahn and Valdez. AJCN 200378928-34.
28Subcutaneous adipose tissue
5 10 weight loss
Visceral adipose tissue
30 visceral adipose tissue loss (diet,
physical activity, pharmacotherapy)
Lipid profile
Deteriorated Improved
Impaired
Improved ?
? ?
?
Insulin sensitivity Insulinemia Glycemia
Reduced obesity (low waist measurement)
Abdominally obese (high waist measurement)
Susceptibility to thrombosis
? ?
Inflammation markers
? ?
Endothelial function
Impaired
Improved
Risk of coronary heart disease
High
Low
Despres J-P et al. BMJ 2001322716.
29Assessing Drug-Induced Causes for Weight Gain
- Diabetes Treatments
- Insulin
- Sulfonylureas
- Thiazolidinediones
- Antihistamines (cyproheptadine)
- ß- and alpha-1 adrenergic receptor blockers
- Chemotherapy agents
- Tamoxifen
- Psychiatric/Neuro
- Anti-psychotics
- Antidepressants
- Lithium
- AEDs
- Steroid Hormones
- Corticosteroids
- Progestational steroids
- HIV Protease inhibitors
30Broaching the Subject Words to Use
- Are you concerned about your weight?
- What is hard about managing your weight?
- How does being overweight affect you?
- What cant you do now that you would like to do
if you weighed less? - What kind of help do you need to manage your
weight?
31How important is it for you to get your weight
under control?
Not important
Very important
2
4
6
7
8
0
1
3
5
9
10
How confident are you to that you can get your
weight under control?
Not confident
Very confident
2
4
6
7
8
0
1
3
5
9
10
32Obesity Treatment Pyramid
33A Guide to Selecting Treatment
The Practical Guide. 2000.
34NHLBI Clinical Guidelines on the Identification,
Evaluation, and Treatment of Overweight and
Obesity in Adults (1998)
- There is strong evidence that combined
interventions of a low calorie diet, increased
physical activity, and behavior therapy provide
the most successful therapy for weight loss and
weight maintenance.
Evidence Category A
35NHLBI Clinical Guidelines on the Identification,
Evaluation, and Treatment of Overweight and
Obesity in Adults (1998)
- Low calorie diets can reduce total body weight
by an average of 8 over 3 to 12 months.
Evidence Category A
36U.S. Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF)
Recommendations
- Fair to good evidence that high-intensity
counselingabout diet, exercise, or bothtogether
with behavioral interventions aimed at skill
development, motivation, and support strategies
produces modest, sustained weight loss (typically
3 to 5 kg for 1 year) in adults who are obese.
Ann Intern Med 2003139930-932.
37Pharmacotherapy
- Indicated as an adjunct to diet and physical
activity for patients with a BMI 30 or 27 who
also have concomitant obesity-related risk
factors or diseases - Agents
- Phentermine (1973) norepinephrine releasing
agent - Sibutramine (1997) serotonin norepinephrine
reuptake inhibitor (SNRI) - Orlistat (1999) gastrointestinal lipase inhibitor
38Additive Effects of Behavior and Meal
Replacement Therapy With Pharmacotherapy for
Obesity
0
Medication alone
5
Medication and behavior modification
10
Weight Loss ()
15
Medication, behavior modification and meal
replacements
P lt 0.05 vs medication alone
20
Time (months)
Wadden et al. Arch Intern Med 2001161218.
39NHLBI Clinical Guidelines on the Identification,
Evaluation, and Treatment of Overweight and
Obesity in Adults (1998)
- Evidence Statement Appropriate weight loss
drugs can augment diet, physical activity and
behavior therapy in weight loss.
Evidence Category B
40NHLBI Clinical Guidelines on the Identification,
Evaluation, and Treatment of Overweight and
Obesity in Adults (1998)
- Evidence Statement Gastrointestinal surgery
can result in substantial weight loss, and
therefore is an available weight loss option for
well-informed and motivated patients with a BMI
40 or 35, who have comorbid conditions and
acceptable operative risks.
Evidence Category B
41Update Bariatric Surgery
- Currently Popular Procedures
Vertical Banded Gastroplasty
Biliopancreatic Diversion with Duodenal Switch
Gastric Bypass
LapBandTM
Restriction
Malabsorption
42Efficacy Outcomes for Weight Reduction Surgeries
RYGB roux-en-y gastric bypass BPD
biliopancreatic diversion
Buchwald et al. JAMA 20042921724.
43Efficacy for Improvement in Obesity-Related
Conditions
Completely Resolved 76.8 70 61.7 85.7
Resolved or Improved 86 ----- 78.5 83.6
Disease Diabetes Hyperlipidemia Hypertension O
bstructive Sleep Apnea
Buchwald et al. JAMA 20042921724
44Conclusion
- Obesity is currently under-recognized and
under-treated. Physicians need to identify and
evaluate the overweight and obese patient at an
earlier stage of development - Screening begins by measuring BMI, waist
circumference and identifying co-morbidities - Treatment always includes lifestyle modification.
Consideration for pharmacotherapy and surgery is
based upon the individual patient