New analysis questions this antipsychotic’s use for weight restoration
STUDY: Alqurashi BF et al, BMC Psychiatry 2026;26:413
STUDY TYPE: Systematic review and meta-analysis
FUNDING: Independent
Background
We’ve tested nearly every type of psych med in anorexia, and none reliably restore weight. Olanzapine has some promising trials, and some negative ones, so this meta-analysis pooled the available randomized controlled trials to see whether it works.
The Study
- Seven randomized controlled trials, 152 patients total; trial sizes ranged from 15 to 50 participants.
- Olanzapine compared to placebo, chlorpromazine, or aripiprazole; dosing ranged from 2.5 to 10 mg daily.
- Duration and setting varied across trials; both inpatient and outpatient studies were included.
- Primary outcome: change in body mass index (BMI).
Results
The pooled analysis of four trials (91 patients) showed that olanzapine raised BMI by an average of 1.68 kg/m² more than control — a modest gain, and one that did not reach statistical significance (p = 0.19). Heterogeneity across trials was extreme (I² = 94%), meaning the studies were measuring something different enough that pooling them is hard to defend.
Psychological symptoms also disappointed. In the largest trial (Attia et al., 2019, n = 152), olanzapine raised BMI faster than placebo (0.259 vs. 0.095 kg/m² per month; p = 0.026), but obsessive-compulsive scores on the Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS) were nearly identical between groups. Weight went up, but thinking didn’t change.
Practice Implications
- Olanzapine can raise appetite, but anorexia is not just a disorder of low appetite.
- Olanzapine carries risks that suggest caution in the face of these statistically negative results.
- Though medications have failed, zinc has small positive trials for weight restoration in anorexia nervosa. It is low risk and addresses part of the underlying cause.
— Chris Aiken, MD
Director, Psych Partners
Editor in Chief, Carlat Psychiatry Report







