Abstract

Background: Limited therapeutic tools and an overwhelming clinical demand are the major limiting factors in pediatric obesity management. The optimal protocol, environment, body mass index (BMI) change targets and duration of obesity-oriented interventions remain to be elucidated. Aims: We aimed to characterize the singularities of follow-up, anthropometric and metabolic evolution of a large cohort of pediatric patients with obesity in a specialized university hospital outpatient obesity unit. Patients and methods: Follow-up duration (up to seven years), attrition rate and anthropometric and metabolic evolution of 1300 children and adolescents with obesity were studied. An individualized analysis was conducted in patients attaining a high level of weight loss (over 1.5 BMI-SDS (standard deviation score) and/or 10% of initial weight; n = 252; 19.4%) as well as in “metabolically healthy” patients (n = 505; 38.8%). Results: Attrition rate was high during the early stages (11.2% prior to and 32.5% right after their initial metabolic evaluation). Mean follow-up time was 1.59 ± 1.60 years (7% of patients fulfilled 7 years). The highest BMI reduction occurred in the first year (−1.11 ± 0.89 SDS, p < 0.001 in 72.5% of patients). At the end of the follow-up, improvements in glucose and lipid metabolism parameters were observed (both p < 0.05), that were highest in patients with the greatest weight reduction (all p < 0.01), independent of the time spent to achieve weight loss. The pubertal growth spurt negatively correlated with obesity severity (r = −0.38; p < 0.01) but patients attaining adult height exceeded their predicted adult height (n = 308, +1.6 ± 5.4 cm; p < 0.001). “Metabolically healthy” patients, but with insulin resistance, had higher blood pressure, glucose, uric acid and triglyceride levels than those without insulin resistance (all p < 0.05). Preservation of the “metabolically healthy” status was associated with BMI improvement. Conclusions: Behavioral management of children with obesity can be effective and does not impair growth but is highly conditioned by high attrition. The best results regarding BMI reduction and metabolic improvement are achieved in the first year of intervention and can be preserved if follow-up is retained.

Highlights

  • Management and follow-up of children and adolescents affected with obesity are crucial clinical challenges worldwide due to both high prevalence and the limited available therapeutic resources

  • Primary care assistance is recommended for childhood obesity management, the low rate of successful weight loss in these patients and the increasing prevalence of obesity associated comorbidities has resulted in obesity being one of the most frequent causes for consultation in specialized pediatric endocrinology or obesity clinics in our environment, generating increasing delays in patient attention [4]

  • The end of follow-up theironly last 21 visit

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Summary

Introduction

Management and follow-up of children and adolescents affected with obesity are crucial clinical challenges worldwide due to both high prevalence and the limited available therapeutic resources. Obesity management is highly influenced by a number of barriers both, from the patient’s side (stigma, gaps in medical education, misperceptions of the disease or weight status, etc.) and from the healthcare system (insufficient staff, time and facilities to provide timely and patient/family-personalized assistance). These barriers strongly impair the probability of therapeutic success [1]. There is no consensus regarding the best environment to manage childhood obesity to achieve a high success in weight loss and its maintenance with, for example, primary care assistance allows for higher accessibility and proximity to patients [5] while tertiary care centers normally have more available resources and the possibility to develop multidisciplinary care units [6]

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