Oude Luttikhuis Hiltje, Baur Louise, Jansen Hanneke, Shrewsbury Vanessa A, O'Malley Claire, Stolk Ronald P, Summerbell Carolyn D
Beatrix Children's Hospital and Department of Epidemiology, University Medical Center Groningen, PO Box 30.001 (CA80), 9700RB, Groningen, Netherlands.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2019 Mar 7;3(3):CD001872. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD001872.pub3.
Child and adolescent obesity is increasingly prevalent, and can be associated with significant short- and long-term health consequences.
To assess the efficacy of lifestyle, drug and surgical interventions for treating obesity in childhood.
We searched CENTRAL on The Cochrane Library Issue 2 2008, MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, PsycINFO, ISI Web of Science, DARE and NHS EED. Searches were undertaken from 1985 to May 2008. References were checked. No language restrictions were applied.
We selected randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of lifestyle (i.e. dietary, physical activity and/or behavioural therapy), drug and surgical interventions for treating obesity in children (mean age under 18 years) with or without the support of family members, with a minimum of six months follow up (three months for actual drug therapy). Interventions that specifically dealt with the treatment of eating disorders or type 2 diabetes, or included participants with a secondary or syndromic cause of obesity were excluded.
Two reviewers independently assessed trial quality and extracted data following the Cochrane Handbook. Where necessary authors were contacted for additional information.
We included 64 RCTs (5230 participants). Lifestyle interventions focused on physical activity and sedentary behaviour in 12 studies, diet in 6 studies, and 36 concentrated on behaviorally orientated treatment programs. Three types of drug interventions (metformin, orlistat and sibutramine) were found in 10 studies. No surgical intervention was eligible for inclusion. The studies included varied greatly in intervention design, outcome measurements and methodological quality.Meta-analyses indicated a reduction in overweight at 6 and 12 months follow up in: i) lifestyle interventions involving children; and ii) lifestyle interventions in adolescents with or without the addition of orlistat or sibutramine. A range of adverse effects was noted in drug RCTs.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: While there is limited quality data to recommend one treatment program to be favoured over another, this review shows that combined behavioural lifestyle interventions compared to standard care or self-help can produce a significant and clinically meaningful reduction in overweight in children and adolescents. In obese adolescents, consideration should be given to the use of either orlistat or sibutramine, as an adjunct to lifestyle interventions, although this approach needs to be carefully weighed up against the potential for adverse effects. Furthermore, high quality research that considers psychosocial determinants for behaviour change, strategies to improve clinician-family interaction, and cost-effective programs for primary and community care is required.
儿童和青少年肥胖问题日益普遍,可能会带来严重的短期和长期健康后果。
评估生活方式、药物和手术干预措施治疗儿童肥胖症的疗效。
我们检索了《考克兰系统评价数据库》2008年第2期的CENTRAL、MEDLINE、EMBASE、CINAHL、PsycINFO、ISI科学网、DARE和英国国家卫生服务系统经济评价数据库(NHS EED)。检索时间为1985年至2008年5月。并对参考文献进行了检查。未设语言限制。
我们纳入了针对儿童(平均年龄18岁以下)肥胖症的生活方式(即饮食、体育活动和/或行为疗法)、药物和手术干预的随机对照试验(RCT),无论是否有家庭成员支持,随访时间至少为6个月(实际药物治疗为3个月)。专门针对饮食失调或2型糖尿病治疗的干预措施,或纳入了继发性或综合征性肥胖原因参与者的干预措施被排除。
两名综述作者独立评估试验质量,并按照《考克兰手册》提取数据。必要时与作者联系以获取更多信息。
我们纳入了64项随机对照试验(5230名参与者)。12项研究中的生活方式干预侧重于体育活动和久坐行为,6项研究侧重于饮食,36项研究集中于以行为为导向的治疗方案。10项研究中发现了三种药物干预措施(二甲双胍、奥利司他和西布曲明)。没有手术干预措施符合纳入标准。这些研究在干预设计、结局测量和方法学质量方面差异很大。荟萃分析表明,在随访6个月和12个月时,超重情况有所减轻,具体如下:i)涉及儿童的生活方式干预;ii)无论是否添加奥利司他或西布曲明,青少年的生活方式干预。在药物随机对照试验中发现了一系列不良反应。
虽然质量数据有限,无法推荐一种治疗方案优于另一种,但本综述表明,与标准护理或自助相比,综合行为生活方式干预可显著且临床上有意义地降低儿童和青少年的超重情况。对于肥胖青少年,应考虑使用奥利司他或西布曲明作为生活方式干预的辅助手段,尽管这种方法需要仔细权衡其潜在的不良反应。此外,需要开展高质量的研究,考虑行为改变的社会心理决定因素、改善临床医生与家庭互动的策略,以及针对初级和社区护理的具有成本效益的方案。