Title: OBESITY DRUGS: CURRENT STATUS AND FUTURE POTENTIAL
1OBESITY DRUGS CURRENT STATUS AND FUTURE POTENTIAL
- Richard L. Atkinson, M.D.
- Director, Obetech Obesity
- Research Center
- Virginia Biotechnology Research Park
- Richmond, Virginia
- obesityvirus.com
2DEFINITION OF OBESITY
- Obesity is a chronic disease of multiple
etiologies characterized by the presence of
excess adipose tissue - RL Atkinson, 1980
3RATIONALE 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
4BARRIERS 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
5OBESITY 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
7AREAS 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
8BARRIERS 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
9BARRIERS 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
10BARRIERS 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
11BARRIERS 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
12BARRIERS 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
13BARRIERS 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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18WEIGHT 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)
19DRUGS FOR OBESITYTHE FUTURE
20POTENTIAL 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
21POTENTIAL 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
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23Topiramate 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
24ZONISAMIDE 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
25RATIONALE 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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28Body Mass Index of subjects who completed 6
months of treatment. Closed circle Phen-fen
Open circle Phen-flu.
29THOUGHTS 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
30RATIONAL 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
31OBESITY 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
32AMERICAN 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
33FOR 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