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Fat-blocking drug: should you use it?(Health)

Consumer Reports

| June 01, 2006 | COPYRIGHT 2006 Consumers Union of the United States, Inc. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

What if weight loss were as simple as popping a pill that limits your body's ability to absorb fat from food? By marketing such a drug over the counter, the pharmaceutical company GlaxoSmithKline is wagering that it can snag a chunk of the $41 billion Americans spend on weight-loss strategies each year. And after a thumbs-up from a Food and Drug Administration advisory panel in January, the agency granted conditional approval of the drug as we went to press.

But ah, yes, there's a catch. The prescription version of the fat-blocking drug, orlistat (Xenical), hasn't lived up to its promise. "In clinical practice, we've found that compliance with orlistat is very poor because of its marginal benefit and tremendous side effects," said Zhaoping Li, M.D., Ph.D., of the clinical nutrition division at the UCLA Medical Center, one of the centers involved in the original trials of orlistat.

At half the prescription strength, the proposed over-the-counter version is likely to be even less effective while continuing to cause the negative effects of the eat-and-excrete approach to weight loss.

According to our analysis, total prescriptions for orlistat dropped by 65 percent between 2001 and 2005. In his comments to the advisory panel, Sidney Wolfe, M.D., director of the health research group of Public Citizen, a nonprofit consumer advocacy group, called the over-the-counter version of orlistat (to be named Alli) "a desperate attempt to revive a barely effective drug with an over-the-counter switch." There is too much short-term risk and no long-term benefit, so Public Citizen does not support the switch of orlistat to over-the-counter status, Wolfe said in a telephone interview.

Data presented to the FDA suggest that Alli works best in those who are very overweight and that results are modest. In clinical trials, severely overweight subjects taking the nonprescription dose for six months lost about 5 pounds more than those taking a placebo (the higher-dose group lost a bit more). In a separate four-month trial, moderately overweight people lost about 212 pounds more than the control group. But any benefit is likely to be short-lived. Alli will be marketed for short-term (six months or less) use only. Follow-up suggests that people start to regain weight once they stop taking it.

EMBARRASSING SIDE EFFECTS

Although orlistat is generally considered safe, it's notorious for what one advisory panel member euphemistically termed "the underwear problem." Unabsorbed fat can cause intestinal side effects such as fatty stools, oily spotting, flatulence with discharge, an urgent need to defecate, and frequent bowel movements.

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