CME SESSIONS COMING SOON
CME1:
Foundations of Pharmacological Treatment in Obesity & Type 2 Diabetes
Purpose
Build a metabolic and ethnic-risk framework before introducing newer drugs.
Outline
- Obesity as a chronic relapsing disease
- Pathophysiology across ethnic groups
- UK BMI thresholds vs cardiometabolic risk
- Role of metformin and legacy agents
- When lifestyle alone is insufficient
- Case examples: South Asian vs White British risk profiles
Learning Objectives
· Describe obesity as a chronic, relapsing metabolic disease and its relationship to type 2 diabetes.
· Explain ethnic differences in cardiometabolic risk, including lower BMI thresholds in South Asian populations.
· Compare mechanisms and weight effects of traditional glucose-lowering agents (e.g. metformin, sulfonylureas, insulin).
· Identify when pharmacological escalation is appropriate within UK primary care pathways.
· Apply culturally informed risk assessment when initiating therapy |
| CME2:
Risk Stratification and Patient Selection in Multi-Ethnic Populations
Purpose
Help prescribers decide who should receive which therapy
Outline
- Ethnicity-adjusted risk models
- Waist circumference, visceral adiposity
- NAFLD, sleep apnoea, PCOS considerations
- Cardiovascular vs glycaemic prioritisation
- Cultural barriers to engagement
- Shared decision-making models
Learning Objectives
- Assess cardiometabolic risk using ethnicity-specific indicators (waist circumference, visceral adiposity, early insulin resistance).
- Recognise obesity phenotypes commonly seen in South Asian, Arab and Black populations.
- Prioritise treatment goals (weight loss, glycaemia, cardiovascular protection, renal outcomes).
- Use shared decision-making approaches that account for cultural beliefs and health literacy.
- Select appropriate pharmacotherapy pathways based on individualised risk profiles
|
| CME3:
SGLT2 Inhibitors and Other Glucose-Lowering Agents with Weight Benefit
Purpose
Position non-incretin therapies correctly
Outline
- Mechanisms affecting weight
- Renal and heart failure outcomes
- Practical prescribing (eGFR, sick-day rules)
· DPP-4 inhibitors (gliptins) and thiazolidinediones (TZDs, e.g., pioglitazone)— realistic expectations
- Ethnic differences in response or risk
- Combining with metformin
Learning Objectives
- Explain the mechanisms of SGLT2 inhibitors and their impact on weight, cardiovascular and renal outcomes.
- Identify which patients benefit most from SGLT2 inhibitors within NICE-aligned prescribing.
- Evaluate the role of DPP-4 inhibitors and TZDs in weight-centred diabetes management.
- Apply safety principles including sick-day rules, eGFR considerations and dehydration risk.
- Integrate SGLT2 inhibitors into treatment plans for ethnically diverse high-risk populations.
|
| CME4:
GLP-1 Receptor Agonists: Mechanism, Evidence and Trial Representation
Purpose
Scientific foundation for later practical sessions.
Outline
- Incretin physiology
- Appetite regulation and central mechanisms
- Major trials overview
- Cardiovascular outcome data
- ReCMEof South Asian, Arab and Black populations
- Evidence gaps and interpretation
Learning Objectives
- Describe incretin physiology and the mechanisms of GLP-1 receptor agonists.
- Interpret key trial outcomes relating to weight loss, glycaemic control and cardiovascular benefit.
- Critically evaluate reCMEof South Asian, Arab and Black populations in major trials.
- Discuss limitations of current evidence when applying results to multi-ethnic UK primary care.
- Compare available GLP-1 agents based on efficacy, dosing and safety
|
| CME5:
Practical Prescribing of GLP-1s in Multi-Ethnic Primary Care
Purpose
Real-world Primary Care workflow across General Practice and Pharmacy settings
Outline
- NICE indications and escalation
- Dosing and titration schedules
- Managing GI adverse effects
- Ramadan fasting considerations
- Injection training and cultural sensitivity
- Monitoring weight trajectories
Learning Objectives
- Apply NICE guidance to initiate and escalate GLP-1 receptor agonists safely.
- Develop titration strategies to minimise gastrointestinal side effects.
- Deliver culturally sensitive patient counselling, including injection education.
- Manage treatment during Ramadan or periods of fasting.
- Monitor outcomes and determine when to continue, switch or discontinue therapy.
|
| CME6:
Dual GLP-1/GIP Agonists (e.g. Tirzepatide): From Theory to Practice
Purpose
Bridge from GLP-1s to next-generation therapies.
Outline
- Dual-agonist pharmacology
- Weight vs glycaemic efficacy
- Patient selection vs GLP-1s
- Side-effect comparisons
- Primary care implementation challenges
- Equity consideration
Learning Objectives
- Explain the pharmacology of dual incretin agonists and how they differ from GLP-1 therapies.
- Evaluate comparative data on weight reduction and glycaemic outcomes.
- Identify patients most likely to benefit from dual-agonist therapy.
- Anticipate adverse effects and safety monitoring requirements.
- Incorporate dual agonists into real-world UK prescribing workflows.
|
| CME7:
Triple and Multi-Agonist Incretin Therapies: The Next Generation
Purpose
Prepare clinicians for pipeline therapies.
Outline
- Triple agonist mechanisms (GLP-1/GIP/Glucagon)
- Early trial signals
- Potential safety concerns
- Anticipated NHS positioning
- Ethical considerations in early adoption
- Future service models
Learning Objectives
- Describe emerging mechanisms behind triple-agonist and multi-target obesity therapies.
- Interpret early clinical trial signals relating to efficacy and safety.
- Discuss potential risks, unknowns and ethical considerations of future therapies.
- Anticipate how upcoming agents may alter obesity and diabetes treatment pathways.
- Prepare for evolving prescribing responsibilities in primary care
|
| CME8:
New Formulations and Long-Acting Platforms (Injectable & Oral)
Purpose
Focus on delivery innovation
Outline
- Oral GLP-1 pharmacokinetics
- Ultra-long-acting injections
- Fixed-dose combinations
- Adherence challenges in diverse communities
- Pharmacy and prescribing logistics
- Digital health integration
Learning Objectives
- Compare oral versus injectable incretin therapies and their pharmacokinetic profiles.
- Assess how ultra-long-acting agents may influence adherence and patient preference.
- Recognise service-delivery implications for UK primary care and pharmacy teams.
- Address practical barriers to adherence in diverse populations.
- Evaluate future prescribing considerations for combination therapies.
|
| CME9:
Integrating Pharmacotherapy with Lifestyle, Culture and Behaviour Change
Purpose
Prevent medication-only thinking
Outline
- Culturally adapted dietary counselling
- Physical activity barriers in different communities
- Faith-related considerations (Ramadan, fasting)
- Psychological drivers of weight regain
- Medication vs lifestyle expectations
- Multidisciplinary team working
Learning Objectives
- Integrate pharmacological therapy with culturally adapted lifestyle interventions.
- Identify behavioural drivers of weight regain and treatment discontinuation.
- Tailor dietary and physical activity advice for South Asian, Arab and Black communities.
- Manage expectations around medication versus lifestyle outcomes.
- Collaborate effectively with multidisciplinary teams to support long-term weight management
|
| CME10:
Equity, Safety and Long-Term Outcomes of Advanced Obesity Pharmacotherapies
Purpose
Programme synthesis + systems thinking.
Outline
- Access disparities in UK prescribing
- Long-term safety monitoring
- Real-world data vs trials
- Cost-effectiveness in NHS
- Reducing prescribing bias
- Advocacy roles for clinicians
Learning Objectives
- Recognise inequities in access to advanced obesity medications within the UK.
- Implement long-term monitoring strategies for safety and effectiveness.
- Critically appraise real-world outcome data across different ethnic groups.
- Identify and reduce potential prescribing bias.
- Advocate for equitable, evidence-based obesity care within NHS systems
|