Biomedicines (Feb 2024)

Influence of <i>NUCB</i>/Nesfatin-1 Polymorphism on Treatment Response to Naltrexone/Bupropion SR in Binge Eating Disorder and Obesity

  • Elvira Anna Carbone,
  • Mariarita Caroleo,
  • Marianna Rania,
  • Renato de Filippis,
  • Francesca Condoleo,
  • Federica Catalano,
  • Matteo Aloi,
  • Pasquale De Fazio,
  • Franco Arturi,
  • Marta Letizia Hribal,
  • Teresa Vanessa Fiorentino,
  • Cristina Segura-Garcia

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines12020451
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. 451

Abstract

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Background and Objectives: The NUCB2 gene and its polymorphisms were identified as novel players in the regulation of food intake, potentially leading to obesity (OBE) and altered eating behaviors. Naltrexone/bupropion SR (NB) showed good efficacy and tolerability for treating OBE and altered eating behaviors associated with binge eating disorder (BED). This prospective study investigates the influence of NUCB2 gene polymorphism on NB treatment response in OBE and BED. Materials and Methods: Body mass index (BMI), eating (EDE-Q, BES, NEQ, GQ, Y-FAS 2.0) and general psychopathology (BDI, STAI-S) were evaluated at baseline (t0) and after 16 weeks (t1) of NB treatment in patients with OBE and BED (Group 1; N = 22) vs. patients with OBE without BED (Group 2; N = 20). Differences were evaluated according to the rs757081 NUCB2 gene polymorphism. Results: NUCB2 polymorphism was equally distributed between groups. Although weight at t0 was higher in Group 1, weight loss was similar at t1 in both groups. BMI was not influenced by NUCB2 polymorphism. In Group 1, the CG-genotype reported significant improvement in eating psychopathology while the GG-genotype reported improvement only for FA. No differences were observed in Group 2. Conclusions: Patients diagnosed with BED and treated with NB exhibited a more favorable treatment response within the CG-genotype of the NUCB2 polymorphism.

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