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    Clamor for obesity pill may test FDA limits

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. drug regulators may have a hard time stopping millions of overweight Americans from taking a new obesity drug that many are likely to view as a miracle pill for slimming waistlines, despite its safety risks.

    Regulators and doctors are hoping they can limit the pill, called Qnexa, to only those patients that need it most, helping fight the nation's obesity epidemic while avoiding exposing people to unnecessary risks of birth defects and heart problems.

    The Food and Drug Administration has been under considerable pressure from lawmakers and patient groups to approve a new obesity drug for the first time in 13 years.

    There is also plenty of history with diet drugs that makes the FDA cautious.

    The infamous diet drug "fen-phen" was pulled from the market in 1997 after reports of sometimes fatal heart-valve problems. Another diet pill, Meridia, was removed in 2010 after it was linked to heart problems.

    "How will these medications be limited in their distribution... so we don't have a repeat of the fen-phen days when people were opening up clinics on every corner, selling these pills for cosmetic purposes?" asked Joseph Nadglowski, chief executive officer of the Obesity Action Coalition, a patient and advocacy group.

    As a condition for approval of Qnexa, the FDA and the drugmaker Vivus proposed a restrictive program to stop pregnant women from taking the drug, to provide training to doctors and to limit distribution to certified mail-order pharmacies.

    Also, the drug will likely only be recommended for obese patients who have a body mass index over 30, or are overweight but have weight-related health issues. A normal BMI is below 25.

    It was these restrictions that ultimately convinced 20 out of 22 outside advisers to the FDA to recommend approval of the drug last week, after an expert panel rejected the drug in 2010.

    The FDA is set to make its final decision by mid-April.

    However, regulators have little power to force doctors to stick to this restrictive program because physicians have latitude to prescribe FDA-approved drugs for other uses, known as "off label."

    In addition, the two drugs in Qnexa are already approved for other conditions, raising the possibility some doctors may already be prescribing them for weight loss.

    The FDA acknowledged that it is difficult to craft a restrictive program that sticks. "We struggled with this internally, but we did not find a perfect solution to this problem," Joyce Weaver, senior analyst in the FDA's division of risk management, told the advisers last week.

    RISK VS. BENEFIT

    There has been a clamor from patient groups, doctors and lawmakers for the FDA to provide more weight-loss options.

    Obesity drugs are seen as the middle ground for patients who struggle with strict diet and exercise regimens, but do not want the risks of bariatric surgery.

    A Senate appropriations committee has directed the FDA to provide a report by the end of March on how it plans to support the development of new obesity treatments.

    Obesity, a leading cause of diabetes, heart disease and other serious health problems, has reached epidemic proportions in the United States, with nearly 68 percent of the U.S. population considered overweight, and a third obese.

    Analysts predict that Qnexa, if approved, will be prescribed widely, with annual sales of $1 billion to $3 billion.

    It combines the appetite suppressant phentermine with the anti-seizure drug topiramate, and helped patients lose 10 percent of their weight after a year during trials. However, the pounds started to creep back on after the first 12 months.

    FDA staff reviewers said patients taking the drug had more safety problems, including memory loss and higher heart rates, than those on a placebo. They also said exposure to topiramate has been linked to a higher rate of oral clefts in infants of women taking the drug during pregnancy.

    Experts worry subtle messages of risk versus benefit may slip past people desperate to shed pounds, and there is little the FDA can do to stop them.

    "Perhaps the only thing that would be better than a pill to help you lose weight would be a pill that makes you more beautiful," said Dr. David Gortler, a former FDA medical officer on the obesity team and current professor of pharmacology at Georgetown Medical School. "In fact, many fashion advertisers promote and equate beauty with the loss of weight.

    "There is going to be a huge demand for Qnexa... (and) if the FDA doesn't regulate Qnexa appropriately there are going to be a deluge of lawsuits," said Gortler.

    SLIPPING THROUGH THE CRACKS

    The FDA often proposes risk mitigation programs to deal with drugs that may cause birth defects. One of the most restrictive is for the acne drug Accutane from Roche, which is known to cause severe birth defects.

    Women who want the drug must take tests every month to prove they are not pregnant. But there is a lack of good information about how effective these programs are.

    Dr. John Jenkins, head of the FDA's office of new drugs, said such programs are pretty good at avoiding women who are pregnant at the time of first receiving the drug.

    "They are not as good at preventing women from receiving it who are pregnant while they are already on the drug," Jenkins told the panel last week. "While we think the number of pregnancies is less, we don't have definitive data."

    Qnexa has some uncertain effects on the heart: it lowers blood pressure, but raises heartbeat. Doctors on the FDA panel were divided about what signal that sends, and asked Vivus to conduct more studies on heart safety, most likely after Qnexa is approved.

    "This drug, if approved, would likely be prescribed to millions or tens of millions of people," said Dr. Michael Lauer, director of the division of cardiovascular sciences at the National Institutes of Health.

    Lauer was one of two people who voted against Qnexa's approval at the FDA panel last week. "Based on the data that we've seen, we think this drug may do enormous good," he said during the panel meeting. "But we may not know that for a long time, or we may find out we've been fooled."

    MORE CONTROL WITH APPROVAL

    The FDA has set a high approval bar for obesity drugs in the past, primarily because of worries that a large portion of the population is likely to take them.

    Qnexa has had the most impressive weight loss out of a trio of pills vying for approval, from Vivus, Arena Pharmaceuticals and Orexigen.

    The drug from Orexigen has also been flagged for heart risks, while FDA reviewers have cautioned about cancer risks associated with the pill from Arena.

    Qnexa is unique among the three because its ingredients are already on the market.

    "These are two medications that are already on the market, and there are hundreds of thousands if not millions of patient care experience with both of these medications. Doctors can combine them, and many of them are," said Dr. Robert Kushner, clinical director of the Northwestern Comprehensive Center on Obesity.

    "I think you can better monitor the usage and protect patients if it's approved than if it's not approved."

     

    13 comments

    • Haroun al Raschid  •  2 mths ago
      Considerable pressure from Lawmakers and Patients ????
      I understand the desperate Patients need, not about the pressure Lawmakers were under. I do agree our Healthcare System is in bad shape, due to obesity. So, what is the plan ?
    • Souix Speaks  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  2 mths ago
      OBESITY will kill you too AND its affects drive up Insurance costs people. SO why NOT give fatties a pill to help them not eat? Its CHEAPER in the long run than Insurance forking over blood-pressure pills & diabetic pills & depression meds... lets face it. Psychotherapy is only limited so Lets do cost -effective medicine & stop moralizing. Addiction is a SERIOUS health problem & if a pill can help
      the addicted I say YES. Just like pills are available for boozers, let fatties have them too.
    • SHELT  •  2 mths ago
      breathing is very dangerous too
    • paul  •  Lubbock, Texas  •  2 mths ago
      With all the other drugs being tested and rejected, I find it fascinating that the safest and most effective weight loss drugs are highly illegal, cheap, and easy to produce.
      • Souix Speaks 2 mths ago
        its true! makes me think that they LIKE us to remain fat because keeping us fat brings in a lot of long-time revenue.....
    • Super  •  2 mths ago
      I am so sick of hearing about the obesity issue that is breaking our healthcare system. It's lack of disciple, self control and self respect and I don't want to hear about the tiny number of obese people who are that way genuinely obese because of health issues. At 4'11" I was 154 l#$%$ at my heaviest. I was sick all the time, tired, depressed, missing out on family activities, low self esteem, inadequate mother to my young son. One day at 33 years old I literally looked myself in the mirror and acknowledged that that I was fat and gross to look and that was the truth, nobody likes looking at fat people. Even fat people make fun of fat people, it's a fact of life. My weight was my problem and was becoming my son's problem because of body and mind crashing on me and my son deserved better, he deserved the best which included a strong, healthy mom. I accepted the blame and responsibility of my own actions and began changing that. I exercised and ate right and lost 40 l#$%$. and when the weight began to go back up by 8 l#$%$ 2 years ago, I reassessed what I was doing again (which was not exercising and eating too much of the right foods) accepted the blame and responsibility and began committing to working out and eating right. Now working out and clean eating is my way of life, who I am, and what I do. It took me two years to lose 8 l#$%$ and 7% body fat. But I refused to give up on myself. I was never going to be overweight again. And on days when I didn't fell like exercising or I wanted one cheat day, I told myself that if gave into those thoughts and temptations and failed to see positive results, I had no one to blame but myself if I wasn't to workout and eat right then I had no right to b!%ch that I was putting on the weight. I didn't use #$%$ affirmations to motivate myself, I used hard facts. Now I have reached my goal and have further challenged myself. Four days after my 40th birthday in June I will be competing in my first bikini competition in a NPC event. Even the catty women I work with have called me an inspiration and have become my cheering section. Anybody and I mean anybody can do what I did. A person just has to have the guts to look at themselves figure out how much self respect and self worth they have for themselves. The minute you believe you are valuable you will change. Too many people take better care or their cars than they do their own bodies.
      • JR 2 mths ago
        You have a lack of discipline for not knowing how to spell or use words correctly in a rant.
      • Haroun al Raschid 2 mths ago
        Maybe the applied pressures to the Lawmakers are to un-burdened the Healthcare System ?
      • Souix Speaks 2 mths ago
        well arent YOU self righteous?
    • Marie Hayes  •  2 mths ago
      Some of us who are over weight--like myself---chose to excersise instead of taking pills, I once was 225 after giving birth and sitting at home eatting while taking care of a baby...yes, if I would have gotten up and started excersing I wouldnt have gotten bigger...but I did and in about two years I went down to 178, my goal is to be 165 for an average height female...but ITS NOT EASY THE SAFIEST WAY AND THAT WILL WORK ISNT PILLS IS EXCERISING---YOU CAN NEVER GO WRONG AND IT WILL BE SAFER.
      • teri81979 2 mths ago
        I hear you. I was near 250 at the end of my pregnancy but lost most of it after I had my son. I ended up at 216 for three yrs due to BC and yes like you I exercised. I am now around 190 and I walk over 1 mile to work (even in a thunderstorm) and slowly losing the weight.
      • WhiskeyBum 2 mths ago
        I applaud you efforts , but 165 and 190 are mens weights , for dudes 5'9 to 6'2 . maybe you are both that tall and muscular .
    • Restore The Sanity  •  2 mths ago
      Look, here are the facts. If you are obese, you will die early. If you take this pill you might die early. The question is whether the chance of death is higher off the pill or on the pill, if it's higher off, then I say let people who want to take the risk, take it, and those who don't, just keep dieting. As long as people know what the dangers are, I say let them decide for themselves.
    • Rebekah  •  2 mths ago
      That's right, lawmakers; ingore the widespread systemic issues that have influenced the massive changes in weight among Americans over the last decade, and try to browbeat an organization designed to protect Americans into allowing potentially dangerous medications to be placed on the market as a part of a bandaid solution that, in the long run, will only make it LOOK like you're actually trying to accomplish something. Just like you do with every other major issue.
    • WhiskeyBum  •  2 mths ago
      Eating less , eating well , and getting enough exercise was completely out of the question .
      Big Pharm kickin' arse in America .
    • BillsCatz  •  2 mths ago
      In plain-speak that really means the drug company will have to provide the results of a few more well-funded company studies -- that omit all the bad results -- and fatten up the pay-off envelopes for the FDA. America, home of the lab rats. And the beat goes on...
    • Kevin  •  2 mths ago
      Dear FDA, I have an effective obesity treatment for the U.S. population. It's called push back from the table, stop super sizing your Big Mac value meals (that you order with a Diet Coke), and get up off your butt and exercise. There are some people who have a legitimate need for these types of medicine, but the majority just need to exhibit a little self control
      • Haroun al Raschid 2 mths ago
        Beware the power of those big Pharmaceutical and big Oil Companies !
      • Souix Speaks 2 mths ago
        if it was so simple...thered be no fatties no drunks & no drug addicts.
        ADDICTION HAS NO SIMPLE CURE & KILLS more people than anything else.
    • Ken Duncan  •  2 mths ago
      So will insurance companies be told that they have to hand it out freely to people?
      • Georgia Belle 2 mths ago
        Insurance companies already pay for insulin for overweight people. In most cases, being overweight caused the diabetes. If the pill works, in the long run, insurance companies will end up paying more for insulin than the pill so I'm betting they'll be happy to give the pill.
      • LilMissFantasy 2 mths ago
        Medicare and Medicaide use our tax dollars to pay for bariatric surgery to people who are barely overweight and care capable of losing the weight themselves. Trust me I see it all the time in my job.
        Money money money.
      • Haroun al Raschid 2 mths ago
        Insurance Companies or the Taxpayers ?
    • Valerie  •  Delta, Canada  •  2 mths ago
      It's not just a self-control issue. Eating disorders come in a variety of forms. One of them that is not widely recognized is addiction. Testing has shown that the pleasure centre of the brain is stimulated from eating in the same way as taking drugs, or having sex. For some people, restricting their food intake is extremely difficult -- they are addicted to food.
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