Grosicki Gregory J, Dhurandhar Nikhil V, Unick Jessica L, Arent Shawn M, Thomas J Graham, Lofton Holly, Shepherd Madelyn C, Kiel Jessica, Coleman Christopher, Jonnalagadda Satya S
Department of Scientific and Clinical Affairs, Medifast, Inc, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Department of Nutritional Sciences, Texas Tech University, Lubbock, TX, United States.
Curr Dev Nutr. 2024 Oct 18;8(11):104486. doi: 10.1016/j.cdnut.2024.104486. eCollection 2024 Nov.
Obesity is a public health crisis, with prevalence rates tripling over the past 60 y. Although lifestyle modifications, such as diet and physical activity, remain the first-line treatments, recent anti-obesity medications (AOMs) have been shown to achieve greater reductions in body weight and fat mass. However, AOMs also reduce fat-free mass, including skeletal muscle, which has been demonstrated to account for 20% to 50% of total weight loss. This can equate to ∼6 kg or 10% of total lean mass after 12-18 mo, a loss comparable to a decade of human aging. Despite questions surrounding the clinical relevance of weight loss-induced muscle loss, the importance of adopting lifestyle behaviors such as eating a protein-rich diet and incorporating regular resistance training to support skeletal muscle health, long-term weight loss maintenance, and overall well-being among AOM users should be encouraged. Herein, we provide a rationale for the clinical significance of minimizing weight-loss-induced lean mass loss and emphasize the integration of diet and physical activity into AOM clinical care. Owing to a lack of published findings on diet and physical activity supporting skeletal muscle health with AOMs, specifically, we lean on findings from large-scale clinical weight loss and diet and exercise trials to draw evidence-based recommendations for strategies to protect skeletal muscle. We conclude by identifying gaps in the literature and emphasizing the need for future experimental research to optimize skeletal muscle and whole-body health through a balance of pharmacotherapy and healthy habits.
肥胖是一场公共卫生危机,在过去60年里患病率增长了两倍。尽管诸如饮食和体育活动等生活方式改变仍然是一线治疗方法,但最近的抗肥胖药物(AOMs)已被证明能更大程度地减轻体重和体脂。然而,AOMs也会减少无脂体重,包括骨骼肌,事实证明,骨骼肌重量减轻占总体重减轻的20%至50%。这相当于在12至18个月后减少约6千克或总瘦体重的10%,这种减少程度与人类十年衰老相当。尽管围绕体重减轻导致的肌肉流失的临床相关性存在疑问,但仍应鼓励AOM使用者采取诸如食用富含蛋白质的饮食和进行定期抗阻训练等生活方式行为,以支持骨骼肌健康、长期维持体重减轻以及整体健康。在此,我们阐述了尽量减少体重减轻导致的瘦体重流失的临床意义的基本原理,并强调将饮食和体育活动纳入AOM临床护理。具体而言,由于缺乏关于支持AOM使用者骨骼肌健康的饮食和体育活动的已发表研究结果,我们借鉴大规模临床体重减轻以及饮食和运动试验的结果,为保护骨骼肌的策略提出基于证据的建议。我们通过指出文献中的空白并强调未来进行实验研究以通过药物治疗与健康习惯的平衡来优化骨骼肌和全身健康的必要性来结束本文。