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. 2021 Nov 3;51(4):8–30.

Table 1. Clinical and Sociodemographic Characteristics for Subsample Prescribed Obesogenic Medications.

Weight Gain Risk
Any High Risk
(N = 130)
High Risk + Bupropion
(N = 31)
High Risk Only
(N = 35)
Total
(N = 1032)
Age (years)
Mean (SD) 49.8 (14.4) 48.3 (12.6) 50.4 (14.3) 48.0 (14.5)
Median 52.0 52.0 53.0 50.0
Min, Max 18, 85 23, 74 24, 74 18, 90
Age Group, N(%)
18 to 34 26 (20.0) 4 (12.9) 9 (25.7) 227 (22.0)
35 to 49 28 (21.5) 10 (32.3) 5 (14.3) 285 (27.6)
50 to 64 53 (40.8) 14 (45.2) 12 (34.3) 379 (36.7)
65 and Over 23 (17.7) 3 (9.7) 9 (25.7) 141 (13.7)
Sex, N(%)
Female 83 (63.8) 21 (67.7) 23 (65.7) 728 (70.5)
Male 47 (36.2) 10 (32.3) 12 (34.3) 304 (29.5)
Ethnicity, N(%)
Hispanic or Latino 8 (6.2) 2 (6.5) 4 (11.4) 80 (7.8)
Not Hispanic or Latino 122 (93.8) 29 (93.5) 31 (88.6) 952 (92.2)
Race, N(%)
White 111 (85.4) 25 (80.6) 29 (82.9) 838 (81.2)
Black 16 (12.3) 5 (16.1) 5 (14.3) 151 (14.6)
Asian 2 (1.5) 1 (3.2) 0 19 (1.8)
Other or Multiple 1 (0.8) 0 1 (2.9) 24 (2.3)
Annual Income ($), N(%)
0–25,000 47 (36.2) 13 (41.9) 10 (28.6) 442 (42.8)
25,000–50,000 42 (32.3) 11 (35.5) 12 (34.3) 253 (24.5)
50,000–75,000 12 (9.2) 3 (9.7) 5 (14.3) 117 (11.3)
75,000–100,000 7 (5.4) 1 (3.2) 2 (5.7) 52 (5.0)
100,000 and above 5 (3.8) 1 (3.2) 2 (5.7) 35 (3.4)
Refused to answer 17 (13.1) 2 (6.5) 4 (11.4) 133 (12.9)
Highest Level of Education, N(%)
Less than high school 6 (4.7) 3 (10.0) 0 34 (3.3)
High school diploma or equivalent 23 (18.0) 3 (10.0) 6 (17.6) 212 (20.9)
Some college or postsecondary, no degree 32 (25.0) 11 (36.7) 6 (17.6) 252 (24.8)
Associate’s degree 18 (14.1) 4 (13.3) 4 (11.8) 128 (12.6)
Bachelor’s degree 32 (25.0) 7 (23.3) 11 (32.4) 246 (24.2)
Master’s degree 15 (11.7) 2 (6.7) 7 (20.6) 109 (10.7)
Doctoral or professional degree 2 (1.6) 0 0 34 (3.3)
Smoker, N(%)
No 100 (76.9) 27 (87.1) 28 (80.0) 872 (84.5)
Yes 30 (23.1) 4 (12.9) 7 (20.0) 160 (15.5)
Generalized Anxiety Disorder Diagnosis, N(%)
0 99 (76.2) 22 (71.0) 28 (80.0) 864 (83.8)
1 31 (23.8) 9 (29.0) 7 (20.0) 167 (16.2)
Panic Disorder Diagnosis, N(%)
0 100 (76.9) 22 (71.0) 32 (91.4) 873 (84.7)
1 30 (23.1) 9 (29.0) 3 (8.6) 158 (15.3)
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder Diagnosis, N(%)
0 119 (91.5) 27 (87.1) 34 (97.1) 980 (95.1)
1 11 (8.5) 4 (12.9) 1 (2.9) 51 (4.9)
Depression Category, N(%)
Moderate (HAM-D17 14–18) 25 (19.2) 8 (25.8) 5 (14.3) 289 (28.0)
Severe (HAM-D17 19–22) 45 (34.6) 12 (38.7) 10 (28.6) 373 (36.1)
Very Severe (HAM-D17 > 23) 60 (46.2) 11 (35.5) 20 (57.1) 370 (35.9)
Baseline HAM-D17
Mean (SD) 22.0 (4.0) 21.2 (3.5) 23.1 (4.5) 21.2 (4.2)
Median 22.0 20.0 24.0 21.0
Min, Max 14, 33 15, 27 14, 33 14, 37
Prior Medication Trials Without Response
Mean (SD) 3.9 (2.9) 4.5 (3.3) 3.8 (3.4) 3.0 (2.3)
Median 3.0 4.0 3.0 2.0
Min, Max 1, 18 1, 18 1, 13 1, 18
Number of Comorbidities
Mean (SD) 7.8 (6.0) 8.5 (5.1) 7.6 (7.9) 7.0 (5.5)
Median 7.0 9.0 6.0 6.0
Min, Max 0, 45 2, 24 0, 45 0, 47
Baseline Weight (pounds)
Mean (SD) 183.2 (40.6) 188.8 (36.0) 171.8 (37.0) 193.3 (49.8)
Median 185.2 190.0 176.0 186.0
Min, Max 103, 300 130, 271 108, 280 95, 387

The following table details features for patients with mdd on “high risk” medications, alone, or with adjunctive “no risk” bupropion to test the hypothesis of whether bupropion appears to mitigate risk of weight gain. As illustrated in figure 1, these groupings are not mutually exclusive as those in the “high risk only” and “high risk + no risk” categories are also included in the “any high risk” group.