Title: FDA 2004: Toward new therapeutics for obesity
1FDA 2004 Toward new therapeutics for obesity
- David G. Orloff, M.D.
- Division of Metabolic and Endocrine Drug
Products, CDER
2Health consequences of excess weight weve known
about it all along
- sudden death is more common in those who are
naturally fat than in the lean - corpulency, when in an extraordinary degree, may
be reckoned a disease, as it in some measure
obstructs the free exercise of the animal
functions and hath a tendency to shorten life,
by paving the way to dangerous distempers - cited in Bray, G.A. Endocrinol Metab Clin N. Amer
32 (2003) 787-804
3Health consequences of excess weight weve known
about it all along
- sudden death is more common in those who are
naturally fat than in the lean - Hippocrates
- corpulency, when in an extraordinary degree, may
be reckoned a disease, as it in some measure
obstructs the free exercise of the animal
functions and hath a tendency to shorten life,
by paving the way to dangerous distempers - cited in Bray, G.A. Endocrinol Metab Clin N. Amer
32 (2003) 787-804
4Health consequences of excess weight weve known
about it all along
- sudden death is more common in those who are
naturally fat than in the lean - Hippocrates
- corpulency, when in an extraordinary degree, may
be reckoned a disease, as it in some measure
obstructs the free exercise of the animal
functions and hath a tendency to shorten life,
by paving the way to dangerous distempers - Flemyng 1760
- cited in Bray, G.A. Endocrinol Metab Clin N. Amer
32 (2003) 787-804
5Obesity comorbidities
- Cardiovascular hypertension, coronary artery
disease, angina pectoris, congestive heart
failure - Cerebrovascular stroke
- Hyperlipidemia
- Metabolic syndrome/type 2 DM
- Cholelithiasis
- Gout, uric acid nephrolithiasis
- Osteoarthritis
- Obstructive sleep apnea, hypoventilation
- Hyperandrogenism, hirsutism, irregular menses,
complications of pregnancy, stress incontinence - Malignancies breast, endometrium, colon,
prostate - Increased surgical risk
- Psychological disorders
6FDA Facilitating the development and marketing
of safe and effective new therapies for obesity
- Charge from Dr. McClellan to OWG/Therapeutics
- assess real or perceived barriers to
development of new or enhanced therapeutics - Make recommendations onways to encourage
development of new or enhanced therapeutics - Revisiting FDA guidance to industry on
development of drugs for obesity - Open comment period to 4-26-04 on 1996 document
- Dialogue with AOA/PhRMA 3-16-04
- Likely Advisory Committee meeting in late 2004
7The harsh reality current state of medical
therapeutics in obesity
- Weight loss
- Current therapies generally induce only modest
degrees of weight loss (mean 1-5 kg relative to
pbo, diet, exercise). - Maintenance
- Weight loss is maintained only when on therapy
and only in a subset of individuals treated.
Natural history about 90 regain lost weight
within 6 months 95 within 2-3 years. - N.B. Limited data available on impact of
drug-associated weight loss on morbid outcomes
no mortality data
8Opportunities multiple potential targets in
obesity therapeutics
- Serotonin, NE, DA
- Leptin/CNTF
- Neuropeptide Y
- Peptide YY
- Ghrelin
- MC 3, MC 4
- MSH
- MCH
- CRH
- Urocortin
- Galanin
- H3
- CART
- Amylin
- Orexin
- CCK-A
- GLP-1
- Bombesin
- Beta 3 adrenergic system
- GH
- Cannabinoid receptor
- Topiramate
- Selective thyroid modulators
9Path forward to safe and effective obesity drugs
- Modern history
- Standards of evidence for approval pre-1996
- Transformation in medical perception of obesity
- Clinical development standards and rationale
post-1996 - Areas for discussion
- Trial duration, efficacy criteria
- Trial duration, safety exposures
- Promotion/selection of therapies based on effects
on comorbidities - Unanswered questions
- Combination therapy (after fen-phen)
- Head-to-head comparisons of approved agents
- Long-term safety and efficacy of older drugs
(e.g., phentermine) - Do drugs (todays and tomorrows) confer
long-term, individual and population, reductions
in morbid and mortal sequelae of obesity
10Modern History of Weight Loss Drugs
- 1880s Thyroid extract (hyperthyroidism)
- 1930s Dinitrophenol (cataracts, neuropathy)
- 1940s Amphetamines (addiction, CNS/cardiac
toxic) - 1960s Rainbow pills -digitalis/diuretics (sudden
death) - 1970s Aminorex (pulmonary hypertension)
- 1990s Redux (cardiac valvulopathy)
11Centrally-Acting Anorexigens Approved Post-19381
- 1947 Desoxyephedrine/methamphetamine
(available pre-38) - 1956 Phenmetrizine (Preludin)
- 1959 - Phendimetrazine (Bontril)
- 1959 - Phentermine (Fastin, Ionamin) W/D CPMP
2000 - 1959 - Diethylpropion (Tenuate)
- 1960 - Benzphetamine (Didrex)
- 1972 - Fenfluramine (Pondimin) W/D 1997
- 1973 - Mazindol (Sanorex)2
- 1995 Dexfenfluramine (Redux) W/D 1997
- 1997 Sibutramine (Meridia)
- 1. All save Redux and Meridia for short-term use
- 2. All save Mazindol amphetamine related
12Standards of evidence pre-1996Short-Term Use
- Prior to 1996, all obesity drugs were approved
for short-term treatment of obesity - Pre-approval trials up to 12 weeks duration
- Limited safety exposures 200-400 patients
- Concerns about abuse/addiction
- Labeled for short term use , i.e., a few weeks
- Efficacy Short-term indication drugs
- Mean loss of 5.0 kg vs. placebo
- range of placebo-subtracted means across studies
1.0 to 10.0 kg
13Transformation in medical perception of obesity
chronic disease model
- Obesity as a chronic condition associated with
metabolic derangements and conferring risk for
long-term morbid and mortal sequelae (i.e., risk
factor/etiologic in DM, CHD, etc.) - High rate of weight regain following
discontinuation of drug treatment - Recognition that maintenance of healthy weight
is critical to reduction in risk for
obesity-associated adverse outcomes
14FDAs Obesity Guidance
- 1992 - obesity drugs transferred from Division of
Neuropharmacologic to Metabolic and Endocrine
Drugs - 1995 - Advisory Committee meeting
- Evolution in disease model lifelong treatment
- Discussions of clinical trial design and
evidentiary standards for approval for long-term
use - 1996 - Draft Guidance issued development of
chronic use anti-obesity drugs
15Clinical development standards and rationale
1996 Obesity Guidance
- Patient Population patients with high risk for
sequelae - Body mass index (morbid obesity)
- 27 kg/m2 with comorbidities
- 30 kg/m2 without comorbidities
- Duration of Phase 3 Trials historical bad luck
with antiobesity drugs absence of outcomes data - First year placebo-controlled - proof of
principle of efficacy - Second year open-label durable efficacy and
safety in long-term use
16Obesity Guidance Efficacy Criteria
- Efficacy criteria at end of year 1 presumed
reduction in risk for sequelae with modest
(sustained) weight loss in serious obesity - Mean placebo-subtracted weight loss 5
- Proportion of subjects who lose 5 of baseline
body weight is greater in drug- vs.
placebo-treated group - EMEA criteria at end of year 1
- mean placebo-subtracted weight loss 10
- Proportion of patients who lose 10 of baseline
body weight is greater in drug- vs.
placebo-treated group
17Drugs Approved for Long-Term Treatment of Obesity
- 1996 - Dexfenfluramine (Redux) w/d 97
- 1997 - Sibutramine (Meridia)
- 1999 - Orlistat (Xenical)
- Efficacy Long-term indication drugs
- Mean loss of 5.0 kg vs. placebo
- range of placebo-subtracted means across studies
1.5 to 6.0 kg
18Barriers Safety exposures must be substantial
- Safety exposures
- 1500 patients for 1 year
- 200-500 patients completing a second year
- ICH E1A Drugs for long-term treatment of
non-life-threatening conditions - 300-600 for 6 months
- 100 for one year
19Rationale Expectations of efficacy of new agents
- Larger/longer exposures if benefit of drug is
- Small (e.g., symptomatic improvement, less
serious disease) - Experienced by only a fraction of treated
patients (prevention) - Of uncertain magnitude (reliance on a surrogate)
- Average placebo-subtracted weight loss of drugs
evaluated to date 3-5 of baseline at year 1 - Not all treated patients lose weight some gain
- No data to date from controlled trials of
benefits in terms of irreversible morbidity or
mortality
20Therapeutic gaps and unanswered questions
- Head-to-head comparisons of approved agents
21Therapeutic gaps and unanswered questions
- Head-to-head comparisons of approved agents
- Long-term safety and efficacy of older drugs
(e.g., phentermine)
22Drug use data 1991-2002
Annual volume of antiobesity medications reported
in the United States, 19912002, IMS HEALTH
National Disease and Therapeutic Index. Data for
2002 are an estimate (E) based on January to
March 2002 figures. HCl indicates hydrochloride.
From Stafford Arch Intern Med, Volume
163(9).May 12, 2003.10461050
23Therapeutic gaps and unanswered questions
- Head-to-head comparisons of approved agents
- Long-term safety and efficacy of older drugs
(e.g., phentermine) - Combination therapy
24Therapeutic gaps and unanswered questions
- Head-to-head comparisons of approved agents
- Long-term safety and efficacy of older drugs
(e.g., phentermine) - Combination therapy
- Do drugs (todays and tomorrows) confer
long-term, individual and population, reductions
in morbid and mortal sequelae of obesity
25Obesity and Type 2 Diabetes an epidemic of
genetic disease
- an epidemic of a genetic disease waxes because
of a rise in environmental risk factors, and then
wanes when the number of susceptible potential
victims falls (but only because of the
preferential deaths of those who are genetically
more susceptible) - Diamond, J. Nature 2003 423 599-602
26Conclusions
- The magnitude of the obesity epidemic, its
contribution to chronic disease, its costs to
individuals and society, and the absence of
broadly effective therapeutics constitute a call
to action by the collective medical community,
including FDA - Resolution of issues around real or perceived
barriers to development is paramount to advancing
the field of obesity therapeutics, though without
sacrificing the quality of the obesity
armamentarium - Diet and exercise remain the mainstays of
prevention and treatment of obesity drugs are
adjunctive to hygienic measures - Precedent with older as well newer drugs,
reliance on weight loss alone as measure of
health effects, directs a cautious, measured
approach in obesity therapeutics - Questions of, among others, comparative efficacy
and safety, long-term clinical outcomes of
treatment, and effects of combination therapy
regimens must be addressed sooner rather than
later