Stratification of obesity phenotypes to optimize future therapy (SOPHIA)

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Abstract

Introduction: Obesity is considered a poor lifestyle choice. ‘Obesity’ is not a sufficient definition for patients, any more than ‘cancer’ or ’arthritis’ would be. A major obstacle is the lack of understanding of pathogenesis. The disease of obesity is considered homogenous, while response to treatment is thought of as heterogeneous. This can change if pathogenesis, risk profiles for complications, and treatment responses are viewed within the context of obesity consisting of several subsets of disease. Areas covered: The European Union-funded Innovative Medicine Initiative project Stratification of Obesity Phenotypes to Optimize Future Obesity Therapy is part of a momentum shift. Operational variables are being used to develop tests and therapies which may allow the prediction of risk of obesities and the prediction of response to obesity treatments. However, changing stakeholder perspectives on obesity may require more than high-quality data and analysis. Expert opinion: For patients to benefit, clinicians need to integrate evidence-based treatments and payers need to reimburse the management of the disease of obesity. This will generate commercial opportunities for industry. We need to involve stakeholders (patients, clinicians, regulators, payer, patient organisations) to create a shared value for mutual gain.

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APA

Tahrani, A. A., Panova-Noeva, M., Schloot, N. C., Hennige, A. M., Soderberg, J., Nadglowski, J., … le Roux, C. W. (2023). Stratification of obesity phenotypes to optimize future therapy (SOPHIA). Expert Review of Gastroenterology and Hepatology. Taylor and Francis Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1080/17474124.2023.2264783

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