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American Journal of Therapeutics 0, 000–000 (2010) A Study of Abrupt Phentermine Cessation in Patients in a Weight Management Program Ed J. Hendricks, MD1* and Frank L. Greenway, MD2 Phentermine is the most widely used antiobesity drug in the United States. Although no evidence of phentermine addiction has been published, fear that phentermine has addiction potential has contributed to curtailment of its worldwide use in clinical practice. The aim of this study was to evaluate the abuse and addiction potential of long-term phentermine pharmacotherapy in patients in a weight management program. Thirty-five patients in a weight management program who abruptly stopped taking prescribed phentermine on their own initiative were examined using the 18-item Kampman Cocaine Selective Severity Assessment scale modified for phentermine. The Kampman Cocaine Selective Severity Assessment scale has also been modified by McGregor for amphetamines to assess withdrawal from amphetamine in amphetamine-addicted subjects. For comparison, 35 new patients were examined with the same scale before any treatment was initiated. Data from the treated and untreated groups were compared by t test with each other and with published data from amphetamine-addicted subjects. There were no significant differences in individual items or total scores between the patients who stopped phentermine abruptly and the patients who had never taken phentermine. There was a striking and significant difference in individual and total scores between the phentermine-treated subjects and the amphetamine-dependent subjects. Cravings for the substance abused, the hallmark characteristic of substance dependence and withdrawal, were entirely absent in the phentermine-treated subjects. Abrupt cessation of long-term phentermine therapy does not induce amphetamine-like withdrawal. Long-term phentermine therapy does not induce phentermine cravings. Symptoms observed after abrupt phentermine cessation represent loss of therapeutic effect and are not withdrawal. Keywords: obesity, obesity treatment, phentermine, addiction, addiction scale INTRODUCTION Amphetamine was first synthesized in the late 19th century but its psychopharmacologic properties were not described until the late 1920s. These properties included decreased fatigue, wakefulness, alertness, euphoria, and increased energy. Clinical testing of amphetamines for the treatment of depression and 1 Center for Weight Management, a private obesity medicine practice, Sacramento and Roseville, CA; and 2Pennington Biomedical Research Center, Louisiana State University System, Baton Rouge, LA. Supported by the Center for Weight Management. *Address for correspondence: Center for Weight Management, 2310 Professional Drive, Roseville, CA 95661. E-mail: [email protected] 1075–2765 ! 2010 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins narcolepsy began in the late 1930s, and it was noted that patients taking amphetamines lost weight.1,2 Less than 1 year later, it was demonstrated that amphetamines could be used for the treatment of obesity3 and subsequent clinical trials showed it to be effective in decreasing weight in both adults and children.4,5 Amphetamines were shown in dogs and humans to decrease body weight by reducing food intake.6 After the introduction of amphetamines to clinical practice in 1944, a number of agents were developed to modify the unwanted stimulation of the central nervous system observed with amphetamines.7 The basic chemical structure of amphetamines is phenylethylamine consisting of a phenyl ring and a side chain. Certain substitutions are capable of decreasing the central nervous system stimulation of amphetamine. In the case of phentermine, the methyl addition to the alpha position of the side chain of the molecule www.americantherapeutics.com 2 reduced stimulation of the central nervous system to a greater extent than its effect on appetite but still caused insomnia in 20% of subjects.8 There is a report of assessment of the potential for abuse and addiction of amphetamine and its chemically related anorectic agents made through the assessment of the stimulatory properties of these various agents. This stimulation was assessed using the spontaneous activity in rats given the drug compared with amphetamines or a placebo. A dose of 3.16 mmol/kg of amphetamine reduced food intake by 57% and increased spontaneous activity by 400%, whereas a dose of 17.8 mmol/kg of phentermine reduced food intake by 52% but increased spontaneous activity only 257%. Thus, phentermine increased spontaneous activity 46% less than amphetamine at a dose that had a similar effect on food intake.9 As a result of this simulation, phentermine has been considered to have the potential for abuse and addiction. Although the Drug Enforcement Administration considers the risks of abuse and addiction of amphetamines significant and places it in Category II, phentermine is in the lowest category for addiction and abuse, Category IV. Although drug abuse has been reported for amphetamines, methamphetamines, and phenmetrazine, claims for drug abuse of other anorectic agents are less frequent. In fact, amphetamines are 10-fold as potent as phentermine in maintaining self-administration behavior in baboons,10 and phentermine has been demonstrated to decrease cocaine self-administration behavior in baboons.11 Nevertheless, concern exists regarding phentermine abuse and addiction as a result of its stimulatory properties. We hypothesize that the stimulatory effects seen in animal studies10 and human studies12 have been overinterpreted as an indicator of potential abuse of phentermine in humans undergoing treatment for obesity and that in fact, the abuse potential of therapeutic phentermine is very low in this particular patient group. Stimulant substance addiction and withdrawal have been investigated extensively in the 40 years since these compounds were classified. The characteristics of cocaine, the prototypical stimulant of abuse, and amphetamine addiction and withdrawal are now well described. Psychometric scales have been created and validated for use in assessing the nature and severity of cocaine addiction and withdrawal. These scales have been modified for use in amphetamineaddicted subjects. We hypothesized that if phentermine does indeed have abuse and addiction potential in subjects being treated for obesity, any symptoms of phentermine addiction or of withdrawal should include some of those described in amphetamine addiction and American Journal of Therapeutics (2010) 0(0) Hendricks and Greenway withdrawal. In this study, we used a psychometric scale, modified for phentermine, to examine patients in a weight management program who stopped taking their phentermine abruptly on their own initiative. The prototypical stimulant of abuse is cocaine. Abrupt cessation of cocaine use in subjects addicted to cocaine is consistently followed by a characteristic, well-described withdrawal symptom complex. Kampman has devised a psychometric scale to assess these typical withdrawal symptoms, the Cocaine Selective Severity Assessment (CSSA).13 The Kampman scale has been modified and used as a metric to assess and characterize amphetamine cessation in amphetamine addicts.14–16 Studies have shown that abrupt cessation of amphetamine use in subjects who are amphetamineaddicted consistently produces a characteristic withdrawal syndrome. In our study, the Kampman CSSA has been modified by substituting the word phentermine for the word cocaine to produce a Phentermine Selective Severity Assessment (PSSA) in a similar manner to the way that amphetamine was substituted for cocaine in the Kampman scale in McGregor’s studies with amphetamine. MATERIALS AND METHODS Patients in weight management programs who are on therapeutic phentermine often discontinue phentermine on their own initiative. Some patients decide they should be able to lose or maintain weight without phentermine. Others, having observed diminution in the strength of appetite suppression, decide the phentermine is not working. Still others miss scheduled appointments for any of a wide variety of reasons and simply run out of phentermine. Typically, patients who discontinue phentermine then observe an increase or a return of hunger, cravings, or both. After a variable time lag, such patients find it increasingly difficult to maintain control of their food intake and most of them gain weight. Some patients on long-term phentermine (more than 90 days) have discontinued phentermine repeatedly. Such patients, having concluded phentermine had been helpful, often return to the weight management program after an interval of variable duration. This study was designed to investigate symptoms these patients experienced and to compare and contrast the symptoms with those in new patients who had never been on phentermine and with symptoms observed in amphetamine-dependent subjects after abrupt cessation of amphetamines. Patients in a private fee-for-service medical bariatric medicine practice who had been on phentermine www.americantherapeutics.com Abrupt Phentermine Cessation T1 monopharmacotherapy continuously for more than 90 days who had abruptly stopped taking phentermine were candidates for inclusion. Candidates were included only if the phentermine dose had not been tapered before cessation and if the candidate had a good memory of events and symptoms in the week after cessation. Patients who had tapered their dose, whose recollection of symptoms and events in the week after cessation was poor, or who were on medications for any psychiatric diagnosis were excluded. Comparison subjects were new patients who had never taken phentermine. The scale used in this study, the PSSA (Table 1), was adapted from the Kampman CSSA with the word ‘‘phentermine’’ replacing the word ‘‘cocaine’’ in Items 4 and 5. McGregor in studying amphetamine cessation in amphetamine-dependent subjects modified the CSSA by substituting the word ‘‘amphetamine’’ for ‘‘cocaine’’ creating an Amphetamine Selective Severity Assessment scale (ASSA). Thus, the only difference among these three scales is the drug name in Items 4 and 5 of each scale; every other scale examination item in the three scales is identical. Subjects were asked to indicate their phentermine craving intensity and frequency, Items 4 and 5, on the Likert scale beneath Table 1. All other items were scored by the examiner, who was not blinded to treatment condition. Memory scores for subjects treated with phentermine were also assessed by the examiner who assigned a 0 to 7 score. Subjects with memory scores lower than 5 were excluded. RESULTS T2 The baseline characteristics of study the subjects are listed in Table 2. Although treated subjects and comparison untreated subjects were not intentionally age- and sex-matched, the two groups had characteristics similar to each other and to the population within the medical practice. The amphetamine-dependent subjects in McGregor’s study were younger and had a higher percentage of males. The range of time on phentermine therapy and the dose range are within phentermine pharmacotherapy durations and dose ranges commonly used in bariatric medicine practice in the United States.17 Results were compared by t tests. Statistical significance was defined as by a two-sided P value less than 0.05. There was no significant difference between treated and untreated groups in individual item scores or in total scores. Means for individual item scores of subjects treated with phentermine and untreated www.americantherapeutics.com 3 subjects were greater than 1 for hyperphagia, carbohydrate craving, and low energy level. Higher scores for hyperphagia, carbohydrate craving, and for low energy level are not surprising because obese patients presenting at weight loss clinics often have these symptoms. Some obese or overweight patients report low activity levels and some report inattention or a poor ability to concentrate. The latter may be attributed to a high incidence of attention deficit disorder and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder in the obese.18 Scores for inattention or inability to concentrate were greater than 0 in six treated subjects and in six untreated subjects suggesting that some of the clinic patients had undiagnosed adult attention deficit. Cravings for phentermine after cessation were uniformly absent; this is reflected in the zero scores for phentermine cravings for both treated and untreated subjects. The scores for treated subjects were significantly different from those previously reported in the literature for amphetamine-dependent subjects in all items except hyperphagia. DISCUSSION Phentermine, the most widely used antiobesity drug, is classified as a Category IV controlled substance. Because of this classification, many believe phentermine to have abuse and addiction potential similar to that of amphetamine, although of lesser degree or intensity, because amphetamine is a Category II controlled substance. Stimulant substance addiction and withdrawal have been investigated extensively in the 40 years since these compounds were classified in response to the US Controlled Substances Act of 1970. The characteristics of cocaine, the prototypical stimulant of abuse, and amphetamine addiction and withdrawal are now well described. Psychometric scales have been created and validated for use in assessing the nature and severity of cocaine addiction and withdrawal. The CSSA scale of Kampman has been validated as an accurate measure of cocaine withdrawal in cocaine-dependent subjects.13,19–21 McGregor modified the Kampman scale for amphetamines (ASSA) and used it for assessing abrupt cessation of amphetamine in amphetaminedependent subjects.14,15 Recognizing that the symptoms attendant to abrupt cessation of phentermine have never been assessed using any modern addiction medicine scale, we modified the CSSA for phentermine (PSSA) and used it to investigate symptoms after abrupt cessation of phentermine pharmacotherapy in the context of a weight management program. American Journal of Therapeutics (2010) 0(0) 4 Hendricks and Greenway Table 1. Phentermine symptom severity assessment scale. American Journal of Therapeutics (2010) 0(0) www.americantherapeutics.com Abrupt Phentermine Cessation 5 Table 2. Baseline subject characteristics. No. Sex Age (years; mean 6 standard deviation) Age range (years) Body mass index (kg/m2; mean 6 standard deviation) Race Days on prescription Range of years: prescription/abuse Days off drug Phentermine dose (mg/day) Dosage range (mg/day) Memory score Phentermine-treated subjects New phentermine-untreated subjects. McGregor’s ASSA 35 9:26; M:F 45.1 6 11.1 23–62 33.6 6 5.1 35 8:27; M:F 45.3 6 12.3 20–66 35.3 6 8.5 20 9:11; M:F 30 19–45 ? W 89% 576 6 719 0.25–11 61.4 6 79.5 46 6 12.5 30–75 6.91 6 0.37 W 84% 0 0 0 0 0 6.94 6 0.34 Australian 2–13 years Days 1–7 0 0 ASSA, amphetamine selective severity assessment; M, male; F, female; W, white. In this study, we discovered that nearly all of the symptoms observed after amphetamine cessation in amphetamine-dependent subjects were absent in the subjects treated with phentermine. Most notably absent AU2 were phentermine cravings. Substance-dependent subjects experience intense cravings for the substance during use and after cessation; cravings are considered a hallmark of both addiction and relapse.22 Table 3. PSSA scores in treated and untreated patients compared with ASSA scores in amphetamine-dependent subjects. Item 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Description Hyperphagia Hypophagia Carbohydrate craving PHEN/A craving intensity PHEN/A craving frequency Bradycardia Hyposomnia Hypersomnia Anxiety Energy level Activity level Tension Attention Paranoia Anhedonia Depression Suicidality Irritability Total scores Range of total scores Maximum possible score Phentermine-treated subjects Mean 6 SD 1.86 0.06 1.71 0 0 0 0 0.20 0.09 1.09 0.51 0.06 0.34 0 0.03 0.09 0 0.12 6.14 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 1.57 0.34 1.81 0 0 0 0 0.41 0.51 1.62 0.98 0.34 0.84 0 0.17 0.37 0 0.32 5.12 0–19 126 Untreated subjects Mean 6 SD 1.91 0.03 2.49 0 0 0.14 0.03 0.11 0.43 1.63 0.54 0.29 0.23 0 0.03 0.26 0 0.23 8.34 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 1.72 0.17 2.13 0 0 0.60 0.17 0.40 1.04 1.85 0.92 0.67 0.55 0 0.17 0.56 0 0.49 4.51 0–21 126 McGregor’s amphetamine dependent Mean 6 SEM P, t test* 0.30 .0.05 0.20 ,0.1 0.32 ,0.01 0.28 ,0.01 0.26 ,0.01 0.06 ,0.05, .0.05 0.23 ,0.01 0.31 ,0.01 0.27 ,0.01 0.30 ,0.01 0.28 ,0.01 0.27 ,0.01 0.26 ,0.01 0.23 ,0.01 0.31 ,0.01 0.30 ,0.01 0.21 ,0.01 0.27 ,0.01 5 day 1 ,0.1 39 6 9 day 7 42 day 4 126 2.30 0.68 3.51 3.90 4.14 0.10 1.41 2.27 3.98 3.87 3.51 3.71 2.22 1.42 3.70 2.68 0.89 3.70 55 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 6 *P values compare columns 2 and 3 with column 4. columns 2 and 3 are not different. PSSA, phentermine selective severity assessment; ASSA, amphetamine selective severity assessment; SD, standard deviation; SEM, standard error of mean; PHEN, phentermine. www.americantherapeutics.com American Journal of Therapeutics (2010) 0(0) 6 Amphetamine cravings were present in varying degrees in each and every amphetamine-dependent subject examined by McGregor.14 Prior investigations indicate within 24 hours after amphetamine-dependent users stop using amphetamine abruptly, as many as 97% experience a withdrawal syndrome characterized by severe dysphoria, irritability, melancholia, anxiety, hypersomnia, marked fatigue, paranoia, and intense craving for the drug.23 Typically, abrupt cessation after a period of heavy amphetamine use is followed by a ‘‘crash’’ lasting 3 days or more during which the subject is profoundly depressed, sleeps up to 20 hours a day, and eats little, followed by days or weeks of insomnia, carbohydrate cravings, and hyperphagia.24 Most symptoms of amphetamine withdrawal fade within the first week after cessation but other symptoms may persist for several months. The ASSA scale has been shown to assess the intensity of amphetamine withdrawal and has been used to further describe the clinical characteristics of abrupt amphetamine cessation.14,15 The data presented here with the PSSA scale, an exact replica of the ASSA except with the word amphetamine replaced with phentermine in two items, clearly demonstrates that abrupt phentermine cessation in the patients studied did not produce amphetamine-like withdrawal symptoms. It should also be pointed out that the type and severity of adverse effects produced by any drug is influenced by the dose, route and duration of administration. Amphetamine abusers typically self-administer the drug by either the inhalational or intravenous route. These routes of administration typically produce very high plasma drug levels very quickly,25 increasing the probability of producing serious adverse effects such as addiction, stroke, and cardiotoxicity. Patients taking oral stimulants, as prescribed by a physician, do not achieve the very high plasma drug levels needed to produce serious adverse effects. This fact is yet another likely explanation for the overall very low rate of serious adverse effects seen with the use of stimulants for the treatment of obesity and of attention deficit disorder. This investigation suggests that if therapeutic phentermine has an addiction potential, the potential must be very much lower than that seen with illicit amphetamine use. Perhaps a more cogent comparison would be to compare the potential for addiction of therapeutic phentermine for treating obesity versus the addiction potential of oral amphetamines in treating attention deficit disorder. The incidence of substance abuse in adults with attention deficit disorder is said to be high, from 9% to 30%, but these figures do not discriminate between substance abuse with therapeutic amphetamine agents for attention deficit and other American Journal of Therapeutics (2010) 0(0) Hendricks and Greenway substances of abuse.26 In fact, the reported evidence supports the conclusion that oral amphetamine stimulant therapy in attention deficit disorder does not increase, but rather reduces the incidence of substance abuse.27–29 If therapeutic oral amphetamine, a Category II drug, is associated with a lower incidence of inducing addiction in patients with attention deficit disorder, it is reasonable to expect that therapeutic oral phentermine for the treatment of obese patients would have an even lower addiction potential. The focus in this study was to show that phentermine cessation in phentermine-treated subjects did not show amphetamine-like withdrawal symptoms; therefore, we did not attempt to quantify symptoms uncharacteristic for amphetamine withdrawal. As a result, this investigation does not describe symptoms unique to phentermine cessation nor describe phentermine therapeutic effects or their disappearance on phentermine cessation. Typically, the focus of the numerous phentermine clinical trial reports is weight loss, and other therapeutic effects such as amelioration of cravings or improvements in mood and energy level have been either ignored or not quantified. Although we did not measure these symptoms systematically, the most notable symptoms reported in this trial should be mentioned. Some study patients reported an initial mild decline in energy level after stopping phentermine, which persisted only if weight gain ensued. Hyperphagia and carbohydrate cravings, which had been suppressed on phentermine therapy, often recurred when these patients stopped therapy. This was true even in patients who had been on phentermine for years. The average time lapse between phentermine cessation and examination for this study was 61 days, but some of the study patients had been off phentermine for as long as 10 months before being examined with the PSSA. However, most of the patients had abruptly stopped taking phentermine and had experienced cessation symptoms on numerous occasions. These subjects typically had very vivid memories of the symptoms occurring in the week after cessation. On the other hand, subjects who had stopped taking phentermine abruptly only one or two times had less detailed recollection; these patients with memory scores graded by the examiner of less than 5 were excluded. Binge use of phentermine has never been reported nor was it observed during this study. Our hypothesis in undertaking this study was that the phentermine stimulatory effects seen in animal studies have been overinterpreted as an indicator of potential abuse of phentermine in humans being treated for obesity. The question of whether phentermine has addiction potential in this group of patients is www.americantherapeutics.com Abrupt Phentermine Cessation AU1 an important one in the face of a growing obesity epidemic, because obesity afflicts the socioeconomically disadvantaged to a disproportionate degree and the majority of third-party payers do not cover obesity drugs. Phentermine, approved in 1959, is now available in generic form and is therefore much less expensive than drugs like Orlistat and Sibutramine, which are approved for chronic obesity treatment. This study demonstrates that long-term phentermine pharmacotherapy in the context of a weight management program does not induce amphetamine-like withdrawal symptoms. The study also indicates that long-term phentermine pharmacotherapy does not induce phentermine cravings. This is true even in patients who had been on phentermine therapy for as long as 11 years and in patients on doses higher than recommended in the package insert. This report provides data supporting other authors’ assertions that long-term phentermine therapy in the context of obesity treatment does not induce phentermine abuse, addiction, or inappropriate use.30,31 Patients who stop taking phentermine abruptly do experience symptoms, but these appear indicative of loss of phentermine therapeutic effect and are not amphetamine-like withdrawal symptoms. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS We gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Richard B. Rothman in designing the study and the constructive comments of Manit Srisurapanont. REFERENCES 1. Nathanson MH. The central action of betaaminopropylbenzine (Benzadrine) clinical observations. J Am Med Assoc. 1937;108:528–531. 2. Ulrich H. 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