Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi

Home | Most-viewed Story | Most-viewed Coverage | Region | People | Time | Events | Business | Sports | Showbiz | IT | Politics | Military | Society | Education | Life | Health
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : News
  Despite failures, search for anti-obesity drugs still looks golden
Last updated: 2008-11-09


Despite failures, search for anti-obesity drugs still looks golden
2008-11-09

Category
Smoking
Nations
Denmark
France
City
Copenhagen
Paris
Category
Regions
Regions
Europe
Ile-de-France
Company
Pfizer Inc
Merck & Co.
Drugs
Xenical
Compound
Marijuana
Category
Obesity
Source
(AFP)

PARIS (AFP) - Designers of anti-obesity drugs have suffered three major setbacks, but the potential reward from treating the world's fat epidemic is so great that their quest is unlikely to be deterred.

After investing a sum rumoured to be in the hundreds of millions of euros (dollars), Sanofi-Aventis of France announced last Wednesday it was abandoning its drug rimonabant, which had stoked huge expectations at its launch in 2006.

Rimonabant -- brand name Acomplia -- ran into a flurry of ever-tougher warnings from European watchdogs about potential psychiatric side effects, including depression.

In October, the European Medicines Agency (EMEA) recommended that rimonabant be pulled from sale in Europe. The drug had never been able to gain approval in the all-important US market.

Also Wednesday, the US giant Pfizer put a stop to tests of a prototype in late-stage development called CP-945,598, citing regulatory hurdles.

"The risk/benefit profile in this class of drugs was lower than expected for obtaining market authorisation," said Catherine Baulac, in charge of new products with Pfizer's French subsidiary.

And on October 2, Merck of the United States pulled the plug on its own experimental obesity fighter, taranabant, because of concerns about anxiety and depression at high doses.

The main causes of obesity -- overconsumption of fatty or sugary food and a sedentary lifestyle -- are well known. But the molecular machinery that drives it is in many ways obscure and, it is now suspected, more complex than thought.

Treating obesity entails a limited basket of options, from lifestyle changes to drugs and gastric-bypass surgery.

But when it comes to that middle choice, the most promising class of new prescription medicines for treating long-term obesity has just been wiped out.

The three scratched drugs belong to a group called cannabinoid receptor antagonists.

They take on the same target in the central nervous system as marijuana. But instead of sharpening appetite -- the "munchies" associated with smoking cannabis -- they work in reverse, dulling the urge to eat.

"There are now just two drugs left, orlistat and sibutramine," Colin Waine, a doctor who is chairman of a British organisation, the National Obesity Forum, said.

Anders Sjoedin, a specialist in obesity drugs at the University of Copenhagen, Denmark, said cannabinoid receptor antagonists had now been discredited as an approach.

"Cannabinoid receptors not only regulate the appetite, they also affect mood," he said.

Orlistat, marketed as Xenical or alli, curbs absorption of fat in the intestine by blocking a pancreatic enzyme. Sibutramine, sold as Reductil or Meridia, affects levels of a brain chemical called serotonin, believed to influence feelings of hunger or satiety.

Both are "very useful," said Waine. They come, though, with a list of side effects -- including, in orlistat's case, the risk of sudden, oily faeces.

As proof of the glittering allure of the obesity market, drug engineers are exploring unusual paths.

According to the UN's World Health Organisation (WHO), around 400 million adults were obese in 2005, and the tally is expected to balloon to more than 700 million in 2015.

In the lab, at least, are potential rivals to orlistat in the field of lipase inhibitors; new neurotransmitter inhibitors that reduce appetite; and even a hydrogel pill that expands in the stomach to give a sense of fullness.

But, should these prototypes ever get the green light to go on sale, will they meet the hopes of people desperate to lose dozens of kilos in a year, rather than just a few?

Even more important, are they safe?

Eleven years ago, the search for an obesity drug ran into controversy when fenfluramine, an appetite suppressant, was banned in the United States over fears of its effect on the heart. Last week, a study published in the journal BioMed Central found fenfluramine's damage to cardiac valves was visible seven years later.

Such questions pose a dilemma for scientists much as they do for drug regulators.

Obesity is a huge and growing disease, for which people are clamouring for a quick fix. Yet it is also a complex disease, and no drug is without side effects to some degree.

Sjoedin said that researchers believed that regulators, especially in the United States, were becoming increasingly demanding about proposed obesity drugs.

Watchdogs were wanting to see more data about adverse effects from proposed drugs, as well as further proof of benefits other than weight loss, such as lower blood pressure.

"Obese people will be around, and I'm not sure that surgery is the solution for all them," said Sjoedin. "In that respect, there is a need for drugs. But no one is going to make a drug unless they can make money out of it in the end."

 Smoking   Pfizer Inc 
  Profile News324GalleryLinks  
  Getting enough sleep? They aren't in West Virginia (2009-10-29)
  Itching to stop smoking? Scientists may know why (2009-09-13)
  Mich. woman's begging to get smokes ends in arrest (2009-08-02)
  Alcohol and Trauma: Blood Test Gets to the Truth (2009-07-24)
  Pentagon won't ban war-zone smoking, despite study (2009-07-15)
  Calif. regulators warn of pot's cancer capability (2009-07-05)
  Obama pledges to quickly sign anti-smoking bill (2009-06-13)
  Study: Lots of red meat increases mortality risk (2009-03-23)
  Stroke deaths soar in poorer nations, drop in rich: study (2009-02-20)
  Study: Paying smokers to quit boosts success rate (2009-02-11)
  Shaping good health as teens outgrow pediatrician (2009-01-06)
  New laws in 5 states call for fire-safe cigarettes (2009-01-02)
  Smoking ban leads to major drop in heart attacks (2008-12-31)
  5 Tips: How to Keep Your New Year's Resolution (2008-12-31)
  Chinese man detained for 3 days for smoking on train (2008-12-25)
  Court allows lawsuits over 'light' cigarettes (2008-12-15)
  Boston commission votes to ban cigar, hookah bars (2008-12-11)
  Cancer to be world's top killer by 2010, WHO says (2008-12-09)
  Obama says he won't be smoking in White House (2008-12-08)
  FTC tosses guidance on tar, nicotine in cigarettes (2008-11-28)
  Encouraging dip in rate of new cancers, deaths (2008-11-26)
  W. Virginia town shrugs at poorest health ranking (2008-11-16)
  Despite failures, search for anti-obesity drugs still looks golden (2008-11-09)
  Smoking Makes You Old Before Your Time (2008-10-15)
  Cigarette suit first up in new court term Monday (2008-10-06)
Related People
  • Peter Jennings
  • Aaron Eckhart
  • Related Events
  • 2008 Beijing Summer Olympics

  • Stories Coverages

    NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
     ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 
    [China-U.S.]: US and China to reduce emissions, but not enough (22:24 11/27)


    [2009 Dubai Debt Crisis]: Stocks slide on concerns about Dubai debt fallout (16:24 11/27)

    [U.S. Markets]: Stocks slide on concerns about Dubai debt fallout (16:24 11/27)


    [Black Friday]: Shoppers pack stores as holiday season revs up (08:58 11/27)


    [European Markets]: Dubai debt fears remain focus in world markets (08:58 11/27)

    [Iran Nuclear Crisis]: Iran condemned by UN nuclear watchdog (22:24 11/27)


    [Holocaust]: Son insists accused Nazi guard will be found innocent (08:58 11/27)

    [Japanese Markets]: Dubai debt fears hit world markets hard (16:52 11/26)

    [2008 U.S. Recession]: Obama and GOP differ over recipe for jobs, economy (16:52 11/26)

    [2008 U.S. Real Estate Crisis]: Seniors suffer in troubled California subdivision (16:52 11/26)



    Muzi.com

    Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
    All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.