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OBESITY DRUGS: CURRENT STATUS AND FUTURE POTENTIAL

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Title: OBESITY DRUGS: CURRENT STATUS AND FUTURE POTENTIAL


1
OBESITY DRUGS CURRENT STATUS AND FUTURE POTENTIAL
  • Richard L. Atkinson, M.D.
  • Director, Obetech Obesity
  • Research Center
  • Virginia Biotechnology Research Park
  • Richmond, Virginia
  • obesityvirus.com

2
DEFINITION OF OBESITY
  • Obesity is a chronic disease of multiple
    etiologies characterized by the presence of
    excess adipose tissue
  • RL Atkinson, 1980

3
RATIONALE FOR DRUG TREATMENT OF OBESITY
  • 1. Obesity is a chronic disease
  • 2. Most chronic diseases are treated with drugs
  • 3. The biochemistry of obese individuals is
    different from that of lean people
  • 4. When obese people lose weight, their
    biochemistry does not become the same as in lean
    people
  • 5. Biochemistry is changed with drugs

4
BARRIERS TO USE OFOBESITY DRUGS
  • 1. Discrimination against obesity
  • 2. Physician/clinician ignorance
  • 3. Economic factors
  • 4. Policy/political barriers
  • 5. Lack of advocacy by obese people
  • 6. Modest effectiveness of obesity drugs

5
OBESITY IS THE LAST BASTION OF SOCIALLY
ACCEPTABLE BIOGTRY
6
AREAS OF DISCRIMINATIONDEFINITION
  • Labeling obesity a disease may be expedient but
    it is not a necessary step in a campaign to
    combat obesity and it may be interpreted as
    self-serving advocacy without a sound scientific
    basis.
  • Heshka and Allison, IJO, 2001

7
AREAS OF DISCRIMINATIONLACK OF MEDICALIZATION
  • Comparison with other chronic diseases
  • 1. Newly diagnosed Type 2 diabetes and
    hypertension respond very well to diet and
    exercise - but the primary treatments are drugs
  • 2. The primary treatment for obesity is diet and
    exercise, drugs are an adjunct. Many patients
    must demonstrate that they have failed DE before
    getting drugs or surgery

8
BARRIERS TO OBESITY DRUGSPHYSICIAN/CLINICIAN
IGNORANCE
  • 1. Obesity thought not to be a real disease
  • 2. Uncomfortable about counseling overweight or
    obese patients
  • 3. Physicians/clinicians not knowledgeable about
    nutrition, physical activity, obesity drugs
  • 4. Unaware of referral information
  • 5. Bias that drug treatments are dangerous,
    ineffective, and somehow not worthy

9
BARRIERS TO OBESITY DRUGSECONOMIC FACTORS
  • 1. Third party payers, government dont cover
  • 2. Treatment expensive, break the bank
  • a. Large number of overweight/obese people
  • b. A high of patients would use obesity drugs
  • 3. Savings in future costs too remote compared to
    current expenses

10
BARRIERS TO OBESITY DRUGS GOVERNMENT FDA
  • 1. Past bias of FDA personnel against obesity/
    obesity drugs (quote Gaining weight doesnt
    hurt you and losing weight doesnt help you)
  • 2. Obesity drugs have been held to a different
    standard than drugs for other diseases (eg
    phen-fen debacle vs troglitazone)
  • 3. Experience of recent obesity drugs
    dexfenfluramine, sibutramine, orlistat
  • 4. Intense political pressure on FDA

11
BARRIERS TO OBESITY DRUGS GOVERNMENT CMS
  • 1. Recent language in Medicare/Medicaid
    regulations
  • Obesity is not a disease
  • 2. Efficacy standards for treatment apparently
    will be applied, in contrast to most other
    chronic diseases

12
BARRIERS TO OBESITY DRUGS
  • The expectations and behavior of obese people
    themselves
  • 1. Do not believe they are worthy of respect
  • 2. Discriminate against the obese as much or more
    than do thin people
  • 3. Do not bind together for action
  • 4. Do not act as advocates for obesity

13
BARRIERS TO OBESITY DRUGSLIMITED CHOICES, POOR
EFFICACY
  • 1. Only two drugs still on patent
  • 2. Only three categories of drugs
  • 3. Poor understanding of etiology of obesity,
    mechanisms of action of drugs
  • 4. Typical weight loss with single agents only
    about 10 of initial body weight
  • 5. Very limited use of combinations of drugs

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WEIGHT LOSS WITH PHENTERMINE
  • 36 week trials
  • Wt loss Wt loss
  • Munro, et al -12.3 kg -13.0
  • BMJ, 68
  • Steel, et al -12.0 kg -12.8
  • (Practitioner, 73)

19
DRUGS FOR OBESITYTHE FUTURE
20
POTENTIAL FUTURE AGENTS
  • 1. Gut peptides
  • 2. Opioid antagonists
  • 3. Neurotransmitter agonists antagonists
  • 4. Thermogenic agents
  • 5. Growth hormone, growth factors
  • 6. Lipid oxidizing agents
  • 7. Nutrient partitioning agents

21
POTENTIAL OBESITY AGENTS
  • Bupropion Axokine
  • Topiramate Melanocortin
  • Zonisamide Serotonin agonists
  • Rimonabant Exendin-4
  • Glucagon-like peptide Leptin analogues
  • PYY 3-36 GH analogues
  • CCK agonists NPY antagonists
  • Enterostatin Beta-3 agonists
  • Lipid oxidizing agents Oleoyl-estrone

22
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23
Topiramate Body Weight Loss in Adults vs
Treatment Duration (Months)
6
4
Average Weight Loss (kg)
2
0
3
6
12
18
24
30
36
42
48
54
60
TPM Treatment Duration (mos)
N126-833
24
ZONISAMIDE FOR WEIGHT LOSS
  • 16 wk, randomized trial in 60 subjects
  • 400-600 mg/d for 16 wk, 16 wk extension
  • Placebo Zonisamide
  • 16 wk wt loss (kg) 0.9 0.4 5.9 0.8
  • 32 wk wt loss (kg) 1.5 0.7 9.2 1.7
  • 32 wk loss of IBW 1.8 9.4
  • losing 5 of IBW 10 57
  • (16 wk) Gadde, et al JAMA 2891820, 03

25
RATIONALE FOR OBESITYDRUG COMBINATIONS
  • 1. Obesity is a chronic disease
  • 2. Most chronic diseases are treated with drugs
  • 3. Most chronic diseases require more than one
    drug
  • 4. Combinations of drugs may have additive or
    synergistic effects
  • 5. Side effects may be offset

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28
Body Mass Index of subjects who completed 6
months of treatment. Closed circle Phen-fen
Open circle Phen-flu.
29
THOUGHTS ON FDA GUIDANCES FOR OBESITY DRUGS
  • 1. Obesity is a major public health problem -
    should obesity drugs be fast-tracked?
  • a. Efficacy shown by virtually all at 6 mo
  • b. Virtually all safety issues seen by then
  • 2. Extended run in periods serve little use
  • 3. If safe, modest weight loss holds promise,
    particularly in combination with other drugs
  • 4. Varied indications for use are justified

30
RATIONAL EXPECTATIONS FOR OBESITY DRUGS
  • 1. Current drugs are modestly effective
  • 2. Drugs in pipeline appear to be similar in
  • terms of efficacy - maximum wt loss about 17
  • 3. Overhype by companies detrimental
  • 4. Overcaution by FDA, others, detrimental
  • 5. Media hasnt always been responsible
  • 6. General public desperate, need perspective and
    understanding of obesity as a disease
  • 7. For now, long term lifestyle changes needed

31
OBESITY DRUGSPROMISE FOR THE FUTURE
  • 1. Drugs are the future of obesity treatment
  • 2. Obesity is due to biochemical differences
  • 3. Drugs change biochemistry
  • 4. Surgery produces wt losses of 25-40 of
    initial body weight
  • 5. Surgery changes biochemistry
  • 6. At least 350 drugs are in the pipeline
  • 7. Combination treatment will be necessary
  • 8. The future is extremely bright

32
AMERICAN OBESITY ASSOCIATION
  • A lay advocacy association dedicated to obesity
  • Mission
  • To improve the quality of life of obese people
  • Contact information
  • Website obesity.org
  • Phone 202-776-7711

33
FOR COPIES OF SLIDES OR FURTHER INFORMATION
  • Richard L. Atkinson, M.D.
  • Obetech Obesity Research Center
  • Virginia Biotechnology Research Park
  • Richmond, Virginia
  • 804-344-5360
  • obesityvirus.com
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