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    Miracle diet pill? A safe drug is elusive

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The battle of the bulge has been a big, fat failure for U.S. drugmakers. But that hasn't stopped them from trying.

    For nearly a century, scientists have struggled to make a diet pill that helps people lose weight without side effects that range from embarrassing digestive issues to dangerous heart problems.

    Earlier this week, a government panel recommended the FDA approve the latest diet drug Qnexa. The recommendation raises hopes that the U.S. could approve the first anti-obesity drug in more than a decade. It also highlights how challenging it is to create a pill that fights fat in a variety of people without negative side effects. Even Qnexa was previously rejected over concerns that it can cause heart palpitations and birth defects if taken by pregnant women.

    "Having a drug for obesity would be like telling me you had a drug for the fever," said Dr. Mitchell Roslin, chief of bariatric surgery at Northern Westchester Hospital in New York. "There can be millions of different reasons why someone is obese; it's really a symptom of various underlying mechanisms."

    An effective and safe diet pill would be an easy sale in the U.S.: With more than 75 million obese adults, the nation's obesity rate is nearing 35 percent. But the biggest problem in creating a weight-loss drug is that there appears to be no safe way to turn off one of the human body's most fundamental functions.

    For millions of years, humans have been programmed to consume calories and store them as energy, or fat. It's this biological mechanism that makes it almost impossible to quickly lose weight by not eating. Cutting down on food instead sends stronger signals to the body to store more calories.

    "Throughout most of human history calories were scarce and hard to get, so we have numerous natural defenses against starvation," said Dr. David Katz of Yale University's Prevention Research Center. "We have no defenses against overeating because we never needed them before."

    So, the drug industry has been on a nearly 100-year search for a drug that can help the body shed pounds. It has mostly failed to come up with an effective one and many of the experiments have proven fatal to patients:

    — Early attempts focused on speeding up metabolism, or the body's method for breaking down food into energy. The speed of metabolism controls how quickly or slowly we burn calories and ultimately how much weight we take on

    In the 1930s, doctors prescribed an industrial chemical called dinitrophenol, which accelerated metabolism, but also caused fever, swelling and deadly toxicity in some patients. The 1938 law establishing the Food and Drug Administration was a response to untested drugs like dinitrophenol.

    — In the '50s and '60s, amphetamines became popular drugs because they boost metabolism and suppress appetite. But the pills proved to be highly addictive, and doctors discovered they increase blood pressure and heart rate. The amphetamine phentermine is approved for short-term weight loss, usually less than 12 weeks, though it is seldom prescribed because of the potential for addiction.

    — Perhaps the worst diet pill safety debacle came in the 1990s and involved the combination of phentermine and another weight loss drug marketed by Wyeth called fenfluramine. The combination of the two pills, dubbed fen-phen, was never approved by the FDA. But because the agency doesn't regulate doctors' decisions about prescribing various combinations of drugs, more than 18 million fen-phen prescriptions were written by 1996.

    One year later, studies suggested that up to a third of patients taking fen-phen experienced heart valve damage. In 1997, Wyeth was forced to recall two versions of fenfluramine and eventually paid more than $13 billion to settle tens of thousands of personal injury lawsuits.

    — In the last decade, drugmakers have moved toward other weight loss concoctions. Currently, the only drug approved for long-term weight loss in the U.S. is orlistat, which is sold as the prescription drug Xenical and over the counter as alli. The drug works by blocking the absorption of fat.

    When launched in 2007, alli received a high-profile marketing push from drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline, complete with TV ads and a celebrity endorsement by country singer Wynonna Judd. But it never took off due to unpleasant side effects, including loose bowel movements. Educational pamphlets for alli even recommend people start the program when they have a few days off work, or bring an extra pair of pants to the office.

    — Most drugmakers now are focusing on medications that block brain signals associated with food craving and appetite. Vivus' Qnexa is one of a trio of drugs seeking FDA approval. The diet pill, which was initially rejected due to the risks of heart palpitations and other safety issues, is a combination of two older drugs.

    It uses phentermine, the appetite suppressant. The other drug is topiramate, an anticonvulsant sold by Johnson & Johnson as Topamax. Topiramate is believed to make patients feel more satiated, though it's unclear exactly how. J&J initially studied Topamax alone as a weight loss treatment but concluded the psychiatric side effects, such as memory loss and difficulty concentrating, were too significant.

    Still, on Wednesday, a panel of FDA doctors and other advisers voted 20-2 in favor of approving Vivus' Qnexa pill, which the drugmaker has resubmitted to the FDA for a second review.

    The group touted the drug's benefits, which include weight loss of nearly 10 percent for most patients taking the drug over a year — the highest reduction reported with any recent diet pill. But panelists stressed that the drugmaker must be required to conduct a large, follow-up study of the pill's effects on the heart.

    The FDA is expected to issue its decision on Qnexa by mid-April.

    "The potential benefits of this medication seem to trump the side effects," said FDA panel member Dr. Kenneth Burman of the Washington Hospital Center in Washington DC. "But in truth, only time will tell."

    Tammy Wade of McCalla, Ala., is confident that the diet pill works. She lost nearly 40 pounds, dropping down to 167 while in a two-year Qnexa study.

    "I never lost that much weight on any of the programs I've tried," said Wade, who's done everything from Weight Watchers to work out with a personal trainer.

     

    70 comments

    • Maggie  •  Sterling, Michigan  •  3 mths ago
      I lost 60 lbs by cutting out refined carbohydrates, adding daily walks and doing 30 minutes of strength training three times a week. Try reading Gary Tabues' "Why We Get Fat".
      • sheilathedford 3 mths ago
        What are refined carbohydrates, exactly? I starve when on the low carb diet. Maybe I'm eating the wrong things?
      • Maggie 3 mths ago
        Refined carbohydrates are; sugar, white flour and white rice. On a low carb diet, people usually cut out all grains, sugars, rice, potatoes, fruit and root vegetables like carrots and beets. You are left with meat, cheese, eggs, nuts and most vegetables.
      • Maggie 3 mths ago
        Also, you ARE starving. A low carb diet convinces the body that it is starving and it burns off body fat as a result. (Look up Ketogenic diet on Wikipedia.) It is a weird feeing that takes some getting used to. Eat your allowed veggies and Metamucil (sugar free psylium husks in water) can make you feel full. You can eat as much meat/cheese/eggs and you want. Good Luck.
    • slowsaguaro  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  2 mths ago
      Its OK to be addicted to every other pill the doc gives you but not one that will actually HELP curb obesity namely the amphetamine. Obesity is hard on hearts too.
    • slowsaguaro  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  2 mths ago
      ALL you preachers make me sick. Theres a pill for EVERYTHING BUT OBESITY,
      ie: high blood pressure, diabetes, depression...but a pill to curb appetite,, oh NO! WHY NOT?
      Addiction? so what. Its OK to be addicted to the "other" pills & die earlier, but oh no. no diet pills for fatties.
      Go figure.
    • slowsaguaro  •  Phoenix, Arizona  •  2 mths ago
      Sideaffects of OBESITY are life threatening too. Doctors shovel out pills for everything but when its for appetite control..no no no. cant do that. Truth is they makes MILLIONS off OBESITY, & thats why theres no pill for it freely given like all other ailment meds.
    • PAMELA  •  Las Vegas, Nevada  •  3 mths ago
      I want a new drug
      One that won't make me sick
      One that won't make me crash my car
      Or make me feel three feet thick

      I want a new drug
      One that won't hurt my head
      One that won't make my mouth too dry
      Or make my eyes too red
    • AS  •  Johnstown, Colorado  •  3 mths ago
      I made that pill already. Eat less, work out more and drink water.
      • Steve 3 mths ago
        yep, get off of your butts
    • CafeenMan  •  3 mths ago
      There will never be a magic diet answer that is safe. The answer is exercise and eating healthy foods in moderation. It's really that simple. What people want is to not be inconvenienced to get off their lazy butts but still look like movie stars through the magic of chemistry.
      • CafeenMan 3 mths ago
        PS. Yes, I understand that food manufacturers don't exactly make it simple to eat healthy when anything you buy in a local grocer is loaded with type II diabetes. But going farther out of your way to find decent food is more work = more exercise.
      • Mary 3 mths ago
        cafeenman, you are full of it. My husband has been on weight watchers for a year (he doesn't cheat on his points) and works out over 6 hours a week. He has lost 8 pounds in a year (he needs to lose about 50). To call all people who can't lose weight lazy is a crock. Just for information, you spelled caffeine wrong in your name. It is usually the "bright bulbs" who criticize others the most. Have a nice day.
      • Richard 3 mths ago
        Mary, you don't get into specifics about how many calories your husband consumes or what his exercise regimen consists of. The idea that he "can't" lose weight is nonsense. He already has. The fact that he hasn't lost more indicates that he isn't exercising at a level of intensity to compensate for the calories he's taking in. It's that simple. In other words, he needs to step up his exercising and/or cut down his caloric intake. CafeenMan is correct: success in maintaining a healthy weight still comes down to proper exercise and diet.
    • Homer G  •  3 mths ago
      No drug is 100% safe. Even herbal drugs if in the wrong hands can kill.
    • SarahB  •  3 mths ago
      I lost 70 lbs on WeightWatchers and discovered when I got low blood pressure, weakness, and couldn't lose more, that Whey put me back on track. My bp is normal and I'm losing again, most importantly, feeling normal.
    • Elaine  •  Buffalo, New York  •  3 mths ago
      lots of sexxxxxx
    • JAMESW  •  Normal, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      I dont think losing 40 lbs in two years is somthing to boast about, considering the cost of the pills used to do it just dosent seem cost effective to me
    • A Yahoo! User  •  Berkeley, California  •  3 mths ago
      I graduated in 2000 from UC Berkeley with a degree in biochemistry. Ultimately, you want your body to process less, the more you tax your enzymes the less that will be available in the future. Eat less, poop less, shop less, and skip the gym; you're just artificially loading your body and you only have 3x10 to the eight heartbeats on average. Dancers get hip replacements and runners get knee replacements ... if you hurt yourself in the gym, and you will eventually, your muscle will turn to fat. Here's my suggestion: nail your resting metabolism ... find out the minimum calories your body requires without artificial loading and minimize your intake to target moderate weight reduction. A small amount of resistance exercise is required to keep your body flexible and in good working condition, try a little yoga.
      • Raj D 3 mths ago
        First of all muscle can not turn into fat, fat is a covering of the muscle due an increase intake of calories, your statement doesn't make sense.
      • Richard 3 mths ago
        I seriously doubt that anyone with a degree in biochemistry believes that muscle "turns into" fat. That doesn't happen. Further, your implication that all those who exercise will eventually get injured shows a complete ignorance of the facts.
    • Reason  •  Orange, California  •  3 mths ago
      Health and Nutrition….let me take another run at it because it is a huge challenge facing us, right on par with energy. There are 3 milestones we observed over the last few years, which are encapsulated in a movie each:

      Fast food nation………teaches us what is going on with the food supply, this is pretty scary stuff and in the history of man and nature has no precedence, one gigantic experiment with no science behind it to observe results

      Supersize me…..one guy saying…ok, let me eat this stuff for 30 days and let’s see what happens. We know what happens, you do this for long and you die. Do it partially and you get very sick

      Fat, sick, and nearly dead……one guy saying….ok, I will take the other extreme and eat what is supposed to be the best nature has to offer to us on the animal level, eye to eye with nature where we belong. We know what happens, a miraculous return of health and well being.

      With that knowledge profound change is about to happen. But it will come at a very high cost….we have to again reform agriculture back to its roots, the food processing industry has to change and return to age old recipes, and the food service industry has to reinvent itself. This is big stuff, but….it is coming, make no mistake. There is no choice, just ask any medical specialist who thinks in terms of national health
    • Klkm  •  3 mths ago
      I am normal to slim weight and my sister is overweight. She has tried every Rx pill out there...and they work for a while, but then I go to her house and see what she considers "diet food", with no exercise....I am not saying a small portion of people don't have an actual problem....but a pill isn't going to make up for not at least taking a walk once a day around the block, or fried chicken twice a week..though you may eat less of it...
    • Dom  •  2 mths ago
      Ah, the usual ignorant posts here. Obesity is about more than calories in = calories out and ”will power.” As usual in biology, the situation is far more complex than that. We all know people who are overweight but seem to eat very little, as we know thin people who can stuff themselves at every meal and still not gain weight. Most of the calories we consume are burned to maintain basal metabolic rate – and that rate varies enormously from one person to the next and has a strong genetic component (or did you think all those ranchers breeding fat cows with fat bulls were just wasting their time?). So for the same amount of caloric input (and even exercise), one person may gain weight, another may stay stable, and a third might lose weight.

      Think of most obese people as hyper-efficient energy storers. A million years ago on the veldts of Africa, such people would have had a big survival advantage – being able to extract the maximum from scarce food and would have survived when thinner (i.e. less efficient energy storers) would have starved. In today’s world where calorie-dense foods are cheap and ubiquitous, the situation is reversed. But do not think for a second that this issue is simple. And there may come a time once again when food is scarce and efficient calorie storage is once again an important survival trait!
    • Ray  •  Waterford, Michigan  •  3 mths ago
      You don't need a gym membership to workout you bunch of Big Macs.
      I have a gym membership, but it's mostly just to look at the eye candy.

      You just need a pair of dumbbells. I use 25's. Then all you need is a DVD or an iPhone app. I find following a video workout works better for me. Especially if hot women are in it.
    • TheTerminatorFan  •  Port St Lucie, Florida  •  3 mths ago
      When they figure this out, it will be worth more than Viagra. People will make BILLIONS.
    • JAMESW  •  Normal, Illinois  •  3 mths ago
      Seems the FDA bans stuff that may work while the market is flooded with crap that hasn't been proven to work I just dont understand their reasoning
    • John  •  3 mths ago
      You do the crime you have to do the time. Exercise and Diet and it has to be permanent. It is a hard pill to swallow.
      • Jelz 3 mths ago
        PERFECT reply.
    • david  •  Wallingford, Connecticut  •  3 mths ago
      I was involved in an 4 month alcohol abuse study a few years ago involving topiramate. Not only was it successful in curbing my habit (went from three 1.5 liters of vodka down to 6 beers a week), I lost 13 pounds and cut my cigar smoking in half. I realize that pills are not the be all and end all of behavior modification, but to me, this was a wonder drug. Admittedly, I did not suffer any of the side effects, but I think it's worth taking the chance.
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