# Effectiveness of metformin for weight control in pediatric patients on SGA

> **NIH NIH R21** · UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON · 2022 · $197,869

## Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY:
Antipsychotic-induced Weight Gain (AIWG) affects up to 80% of children taking atypical/second generation
antipsychotic (SGA) drugs. Changes in the physical appearance can lead to poor medication adherence.
Childhood onset obesity carries a greater risk for type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular diseases than its onset in
adults. Metformin is the most extensively studied adjuvant intervention for the management of AIWG in adults.
In children and adolescents, the data are consistent but much more limited. The beneficial effect of adjuvant
metformin established in trials has yet to be examined in real world SGA recipients. Our prior work found that
most of the AIWG in children and adolescents happened during the first three months of SGA treatment, and
SGA discontinuation only reversed a quarter of the weight patient gained during the treatment within one year
of SGA cessation. The timeline for AIWG and its limited reversibility highlights the importance of AIWG
prevention and early intervention, however, the optimal timing for adjuvant metformin initiation has not been
investigated in the pediatric population. It is known that children and adolescents follow distinctively different
weight development trajectories. Our preliminary findings suggest similar variations may also exist in pediatric
AIWG. It remains unknown whether individuals following the different trajectories also respond differently to
adjuvant metformin. The GOAL of the proposed study is to comprehensively examine the effectiveness of
adjuvant metformin in a real world sample. To achieve the goal, we will identify children and adolescents aged
6 to 19 years who were treatment naive and received adjuvant metformin during the first 24 months of SGA
treatment using a large national electronic medical record (EMR) database. The adjuvant metformin recipients
are further categorized as early, intermediate and late initiators based on the period between SGA
commencement and metformin initiation. The proposed study has two specific aims: Aim I: To compare the
effectiveness of 1) adjuvant metformin on AIWG between propensity score weights matched 1) users and non-
users, and among matched 2) early, intermediate, and late initiators using weighted linear mixed model with
repeated measures. Aim II: To identify patient subgroups following certain weight development trajectories
who are most likely to benefit from 1) the use adjuvant metformin, and from 2) the early initiation of metformin
using group-based trajectory modeling integrated with propensity score. We hypothesize that H1: There is less
increase in age-sex-specific weight z score when comparing 1) adjuvant metformin users vs. non-users, and
when comparing 2) early and intermediate initiators vs. late initiators during a 12-month period since metformin
initiation. H2: The magnitude of adjuvant metformin effect on AIWG, and the dependency of its effect upon the
stage of SGA treatment at metformin initiation differ in patien...

## Key facts

- **NIH application ID:** 10307598
- **Project number:** 5R21MH125039-02
- **Recipient organization:** UNIVERSITY OF HOUSTON
- **Principal Investigator:** Hua Chen
- **Activity code:** R21 (R01, R21, SBIR, etc.)
- **Funding institute:** NIH
- **Fiscal year:** 2022
- **Award amount:** $197,869
- **Award type:** 5
- **Project period:** 2020-12-01 → 2023-10-31

## Primary source

NIH RePORTER: https://reporter.nih.gov/project-details/10307598

## Citation

> US National Institutes of Health, RePORTER application 10307598, Effectiveness of metformin for weight control in pediatric patients on SGA (5R21MH125039-02). Retrieved via AI Analytics 2026-05-24 from https://api.ai-analytics.org/grant/nih/10307598. Licensed CC0.

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