Phentermine/topiramate for weight reduction and treatment of adverse metabolic
consequences in obesity.
Author(s): Bays HE, Gadde KM.
Affiliation(s): L-MARC Research Center, Louisville, Kentucky 40213, USA. HBaysMD@aol.com
Publication date & source: 2011, Drugs Today (Barc). , 47(12):903-14
Phentermine hydrochloride is a noradrenergic sympathetic amine approved for
decades by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) at doses as high as 37.5
mg/day for the short-term treatment of obesity. Topiramate is a
sulfamate-substituted monosaccharide marketed since 1996, and approved by the FDA
for seizure disorders at doses up to 400 mg/day and for the prevention of
migraine headaches at doses up to 100 mg/day. Clinical trial data suggest
topiramate promotes weight loss. The prescribing information of neither agent
describes adverse drug interactions with the other. The controlled-release
formulation of phentermine and topiramate at low, medium and full doses (with
full dose containing 15 mg of phentermine hydrochloride and 92 mg of topiramate)
promotes weight reduction, with clinical trial data supporting improvement in
adiposopathic consequences leading to metabolic diseases. Reported adverse events
with this combination agent are as expected, based upon knowledge of the
individual components.
Erratum in
Drugs Today (Barc). 2012 Jan;48(1):95.
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