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Miracle diet pill? A safe drug is elusive

Experts say deep, complex causes of obesity may be beyond reach of weight loss drugs

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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.

 

73 comments

  • DonR  •  3 months ago
    How about a pill that reduces lawmakers addiction to spending and a bonus addiction they spend less.
    • NMSU 3 months ago
      How about a pill that helps people use correct punctuation?
    • Aaron 3 months ago
      NMSU, we can find a cure for cancer, but that's asking for way to much.
    • Deepsix 3 months ago
      But Americans won't give up their Entitlements. Obama's Entitlement Nation, 17 Trillion in debt will end in a firey crash when the rest of the world votes on the value of the dollar (fiat currency) This election made by the rest of the world is the one that counts.
  • eaw0002  •  3 months ago
    in one study over 25% of americans have no measurable chromium in their body. chromium,selenium,silicon are over 90% removed from white flour,white sugar, white bread (which is a combination of both those first two), white rice. and magnesium is over 50% removed. whole food vitamins and minerals are able to be best absorbed, and used by the body. your body knows what to do with food. twice winner of the nobel prize in medicine said, "all disease is caused by lack of vitamins and minerals". hippocrates said, "let food be your medicine, and medicine be your food". an apple placed on the counter will "digest" itself. your body leeches out of its own reserves minerals just to digest processed food.
    putting back in to your body what has been leeched out just to process your food, is needed to be healthy. restore the minerals you should have. give yourself a chance.
  • Larry Brumbaker  •  3 months ago
    They need to sell these pills at "The Scooter Store".
  • Jo Jo Jo Jo  •  Smyrna, Delaware  •  3 months ago
    Forget the drugs....subliminally hypnotize the 'hefties' to bulimiacally regurgitate their McDonalds and Krispy Kreme contents as soon as they walk out the doors of the associated premises! The guaranteed positive result will be a drastic decrease in health care costs!!!
  • Yahoo user  •  3 months ago
    Aiming to the aging bay-boomers, beware of the wonder drugs on the market claiming of its miraculous effects.They could do you more harm than good.
  • Mr. Cold Water Of Reality ...  •  3 months ago
    I doubt that an effective obesity pill will ever come to market. Drug companies make too much on obesity-related illnesses to ever want to cure it.
  • Tex-Mex  •  3 months ago
    Americas obesity rate is 35%??? Hello have you gone to any Walmart, fast food chain store or grocery store and just watch the people that shop? The figure should be at least 80% obese! I am not overweight but that scared me to diet to shed a couple of pounds!Just look for yourself the next time you go get a Pizza,Whataburger,Mcdonalds etc.. most of their customers are all overweight.
  • agedsage  •  3 months ago
    America, we have an addiction problem.
  • Russell  •  Nashville, Tennessee  •  3 months ago
    If you want to see fat people, go to a resturant that offers an all you can eat buffett.They have zero wiil power. I just wonder how much food has to be eaten to get to a weight of 400 lbs. or more, do they eat 24/7 ?
  • Joe  •  3 months ago
    Eat less, exercise more!
    • A Yahoo! User 3 months ago
      Yep, the one sure way to lose weight, people just don't get it, they'd rather keep eating the wrong food with no exercise and hope a diet pill will help them lose weight .... LOL
  • Zeek  •  3 months ago
    We're going to need that fat guy when there is no food and we turn to canibalism.
  • Work Horse  •  3 months ago
    Drug-makers need to make a pill that makes drug-makers make better pills, and makes Yahoo bloggers actually get out and run for public office because they can do a better job.... they're just not, because ... ummm ....
  • Cathy  •  Kansas City, Missouri  •  3 months ago
    Have a little dedication people. Mcdonalds business is booming because obesity is out of control in this country. Go to the grocery store on any given day and look at the lard that struggles to get through an aisle. It's a freaking joke. Handicap shopping carts outnumber regular ones. America is just plain fat. The fattest in the world, hands down.
    • David 3 months ago
      Aren't we as a society a damm-d mess? Ha ha ha
    • Anonymous 3 months ago
      Soooo....invest in McDonald's. What's the problem?
  • jen  •  3 months ago
    @anonymous who replied to my post: F--- off! If you don't have the chutzpah to put your name on your post then keep quiet while you hide in your corner.
  • David  •  Washington, District of Columbia  •  3 months ago
    The indisputable diet: calories in must be lower than calories out.
  • A Yahoo! User  •  3 months ago
    How about just.eating the right foods, have smaller portions & exercise. I know these three things will sound foreign to many, but all medical & nutritional experts will agree that it works. Shhhhh, don't tell anyone the secret.. let them take diet pills.. LOL
  • exqindex  •  Milwaukee, Wisconsin  •  3 months ago
    This will never pass the FDA. A drug which can potentially decrease one's weight by only 10% is worthless. And 10% is the maximum expected. If a person weighs 350 lbs, taking this new drug might decrease his weight to 315 lbs. BFD!
  • jim m  •  Louisville, Kentucky  •  3 months ago
    "For millions of years, humans have been programmed to consume calories and store them as energy."....all destroyed by eating out of season, loss of the ability, to understand the concept of Hunting and Gathering.. and totally ignoring basic science skills, about mass and fermentation....all from the comfort of the drive thru window at the corner.......the diet and drug industry is a fear based, money machine.........reality is, what will they do if the fats and sugars are regulated? will they take the time to understand food?
  • Rusty Shackleford  •  Sunnyvale, California  •  3 months ago
    have you or a loved one taken Qnexa...............?

    i mean it just writes itself doesn't it?
  • Mike N  •  3 months ago
    they never tested these drug in the real world situation so expect interaction side effect with other drugs.
 
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