AI Article Synopsis

  • The review assesses the effectiveness and safety of deoxycholic acid injections for reducing submental fat compared to a placebo and examines potential bias from industry sponsorship in clinical trials.
  • After reviewing 5,756 studies, only five randomized clinical trials met the criteria, with only two showing a low risk of bias while all indicated potential industry bias.
  • The findings suggest that deoxycholic acid is effective for fat reduction with manageable adverse effects, but the conclusions are tempered by the low to moderate evidence quality and the presence of industry influence.

Article Abstract

Lipolytic substance injections to reduce localized fat have been extensively used because it is a low-invasive method. This review aimed to evaluate the efficacy and safety of deoxycholic acid in submental fat reduction compared to a placebo and investigate the potential industry sponsorship bias in the results of randomized clinical trials on this topic. Ten electronic databases were extensively searched for randomized clinical trials without restriction on language and year of publication. Two reviewers extracted the data and assessed the individual risk of bias in the studies with the RoB 2.0 tool. The industry sponsorship bias was evaluated according to citations in the articles regarding industry funding/sponsorship throughout the texts. Fixed and random effects meta-analyses were performed, and the results were reported in Risk Ratio (RR) at a 95% Confidence Interval (95% CI). The initial search provided 5756 results, of which only five were included. Only two studies had a low risk of bias. All studies showed a potential industry bias. The meta-analysis showed that patients treated with deoxycholic acid had significant positive results for all efficacy outcomes and a higher risk of fibrosis, pain, erythema, numbness, swelling, edema, pruritus, nodules, headache, and paresthesia. The low to moderate certainty of evidence found allows concluding that deoxycholic acid is effective in submental fat reduction, causing well-tolerated adverse effects. However, all eligible studies showed a potential industry bias.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10570630PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.clinsp.2023.100220DOI Listing

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