Patients with schizophrenia are at increased risk for developing the metabolic syndrome or its individual components due to their lifestyle, suspected genetic predisposition, and exposure to antipsychotic medications that can cause weight gain and other metabolic side effects. Despite the availability of clinical guidelines, screening for and monitoring of metabolic problems in this patient population continue to be suboptimal. We provide an overview specifically addressing 1) why patients with schizophrenia are at increased risk for metabolic problems; 2) how commonly used antipsychotic medications vary in terms of their metabolic liability; 3) how to effectively screen for and monitor metabolic problems in patients receiving antipsychotic medications; 4) what interventions can prevent, limit, or reverse the metabolic side effects of antipsychotic drug treatment; and 5) what are the barriers to the care of these patients.
Individuals receiving certain atypical antipsychotic medications are at risk of gaining weight and developing metabolic problems. There are no established drug treatments to prevent or counter these problems. However, the antihyperglycaemic agent metformin appears promising in some recent studies and we review the literature that evaluates metformin for limiting or reversing atypical antipsychotic drug-induced weight gain and glucose metabolism dysregulation. These studies suggest that metformin is beneficial if started early in antipsychotic drug treatment. Metformin has also been shown to prevent or delay the onset of type 2 diabetes mellitus in high-risk individuals from the general population. Based on these findings, we identify antipsychotic drug-treated patients who might benefit from metformin therapy and offer clinical guidelines for its use. Further long-term studies are needed to extend our observations and improve this strategy.
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