Antiobesity drugs plus behavioural treatment induces more weight loss than medication alone

3 hours ago
Antiobesity drugs plus behavioural treatment induces more weight loss than medication alone

Oral antiobesity medications (AOMs) combined with behavioural treatment via telemedicine induces greater weight loss than medications alone, a study has shown.

“Guidelines recommend pairing AOMs with behavioural treatment,” the investigators said. “This 12-week, two-arm randomized controlled trial evaluated oral AOMs with vs without behavioural treatment.”

A total of 101 patients eligible for bupropion and naltrexone from a telehealth weight management clinic were enrolled in this study. Eligible participants were randomly allocated to receive bupropion and naltrexone (n=50) or bupropion and naltrexone with behavioural treatment (WeightWatchers; n=51).

Remote measurements of body weight, behavioural, and psychosocial measures were completed at baseline and week 12. Twelve-week change in weight was the primary outcome. The investigators used ANCOVA to assess between-group differences in changes.

Most of the participants were female (94.1 percent), with a mean age of 43.9 years and a mean BMI of 37.0 kg/m2. Those who received behavioural treatment achieved a significantly greater weight loss at week 12 than those who did not (absolute weight: mean difference ‒1.8 kg; p=0.03; percent weight: mean difference ‒1.6 percent; p=0.04).

These findings support current recommendations to pair AOMs with behavioural treatment, according to the investigators.

Obesity 2026;34:588-597