New promising obesity drug may have huge potential
Posted on 23 October 2008
According to trials, a new obesity drug, Tesofensine,
which may be launched on the world market in a few years,
can produce weight loss twice that of currently approved
obesity drugs. The Danish company Neurosearch and a number
of researchers at the Faculty of Life Sciences at University
of Copenhagen are behind the promising findings.
Tesofensine can produce weight loss twice that of
currently approved obesity drugs, and should be studied in
phase III trials. These are the conclusions of an article
published early online and in an upcoming edition of The
Lancet, written by Professor Arne Astrup, Department of
Human Nutrition, Faculty of Life Sciences, University of
Copenhagen, Denmark, and colleagues.
Increased obesity prevalence worldwide, in both developed
and developing countries, results in more people with
cardiovascular disease, diabetes, musculoskeletal disorders,
and cancer. Whilst gastric bypass surgery substantially
reduces bodyweight and obesity-related disease, the
researchers believe a treatment gap exists between the
effectiveness of currently marketed obesity drugs and
gastric-bypass surgery. Tesofensine – which inhibits the
presynaptic uptake of the neurotransmitters noradrenaline,
dopamine and serotonin in the brain – has been shown to be
safe and effective in animal models. It also caused
unintended weight loss when it was given obese patients with
Parkinson’s or Alzheimer’s disease when it was researched
for those conditions. The drug works by suppressing hunger,
leading to an energy deficit which burns off excess body
fat.
This randomised, placebo-controlled phase II study was
done in five Danish obesity management centres, and involved
203 obese patients (body mass index 30-40 kg/m2), weighing a
mean of just over 100kg. They were prescribed a
limited-energy diet and assigned to tesofensine 0.25mg (52
patients), 0.5 mg (50), 1.0 mg (49), or placebo (52), all
once daily for 24 weeks. The primary outcome was percentage
change in bodyweight. A total of 161 patients completed the
study, and an analysis showed that the mean weight loss
recorded for placebo and diet was 2.2kg and for tesofensine
0.25mg, 0.5mg and 1.0mg it was 6.7kg, 11.3kg, and 12.8kg
respectively. For the 0.5mg and 1.0mg doses, this
represented a weight loss around twice that attained using
sibutramine or rimonabant*, the currently-approved therapies
in Europe. Blood pressure was increased in the 1.0mg
group.The most common side-effects caused by tesofensine
were dry mouth, nausea, constipation, hard stools, diarrhoea,
and insomnia.
The authors conclude that the 0.5mg dose of tesofensine
is more promising than the 1.0mg dose because it produces a
similar weight loss with less side-effects. They say: “We
conclude that tesofensine 0.5 mg, once daily for 6 months,
has the potential to produce twice the weight loss as
currently approved drugs; however, larger phase III studies
are needed to substantiate our findings.”
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