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THIS IS A GREAT NEWS FOR OUR OBESITY DRUG. HOPE TO SEE THE HUMAN...

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    THIS IS A GREAT NEWS FOR OUR OBESITY DRUG. HOPE TO SEE THE HUMAN TRAILS DONE IN NEAR FUTURE.

    Here is an article from BLOOMBERG
    By Michelle Fay Cortez - Sep 2, 2010 10:10 AM ET

    Abbott Laboratories weight-loss pill Meridia increases the risk of heart attacks and strokes in people with heart disease, according to a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine.

    The results will be reviewed at a meeting of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration next month, when officials will weigh whether the medication should remain on the market. European regulators pulled the drug from pharmacy shelves last year on the basis of a preliminary review of the study. Abbott has said Meridia will generate $100 million this year in worldwide sales.

    The findings led public health advocates to ask why it has taken the FDA so long to act on the medication, approved 14 years ago even as evidence showed it can raise blood pressure and heart rate. Patients taking the drug lost an average of 4.3 kilograms (9.4 pounds) during the six-year study.

    Fundamentally, its pretty bad, said Steven Nissen, chief of cardiology at the Cleveland Clinic, in a telephone interview. Here is a drug that has no medical benefits whatsoever and high risks. The FDA ought to get this drug off the market.

    The findings dont change the companys position that Meridia benefits select patients, including those without heart disease who havent been able to lose weight with diet and exercise alone, said Scott Davies, an Abbott spokesman. More than 90 percent of patients in the trial wouldnt be eligible to be given Meridia on the basis of its current marketing label, he said in a telephone interview.

    Important Option

    This is an important option for patients and physicians to treat a serious condition for which there are few treatments currently available, Davies said.

    The drug is expected to generate about $30 million in sales in the U.S. this year, he said.

    Calling for the medicine to be banned is complete madness, said Philip James, the lead researcher of the study, who is a professor of nutrition at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine. The normal prescription requirements should continue, but with a strong warning against using it in people who have had heart attacks or strokes.

    The FDA is also reviewing three new prescription weight- loss drugs this year. Vivus Inc., the Mountain View, California- based company that was first in line, failed to win an advisory panels backing of its Qnexa drug in July.

    Next FDA Panels

    The panel is scheduled to review San Diego-based Arena Pharmaceuticals Inc. and Tokyo-based Eisai Co.s lorcaserin Sept. 16 and tentatively slated to review La Jolla, California- based Orexigen Therapeutics Inc.s Contrave Dec. 7. The FDA usually follows the recommendations of its advisers, though its not required.

    On Sept. 15, doctors and scientists on the FDAs Endocrinologic and Metabolic Drugs Advisory Committee will discuss the results of todays Meridia study, called Scout. In January, the agency asked Abbott to revise Meridias prescribing information to say that it isnt recommended for people with a history of cardiovascular disease, based on data from the Scout trial.

    The study of Meridia, funded by Abbott Park, Illinois-based Abbott, tracked 9,804 high-risk patients with heart disease, diabetes or both to see if the medicine influenced their cardiac health. Previous trials showed weight loss improves health and helps the heart, though none looked at the long-term risks of weight-loss drugs.

    Heart Attacks

    After more than three years, 11.4 percent of those given Meridia died or suffered a heart attack, stroke or cardiac arrest, compared with 10 percent given a placebo. The biggest difference was in heart attacks and strokes, particularly in patients who already had heart disease.

    It is difficult to discern a credible rationale for keeping this medication on the market, wrote Gregory Curfman, Stephen Morrissey and Jeffrey Drazen, the journals editors, in a commentary. It has minimal efficacy for weight loss, no apparent benefit for clinical outcomes, a worrisome cardiovascular risk profile and a plausible mechanism to explain the cardiovascular risk.

    If you look only at patients who lost weight, they did show a benefit, James said. Those results will be presented to the FDA, he said. The researchers were shocked by the decision to pull the drug off the market in Europe on the basis of the study results, and unanimously agree it should remain available in the U.S., James said.

    Monitor Early

    We wouldnt hesitate to treat people with Meridia, but we would emphasize that blood pressure should be monitored early on to see if they have an unusual response, James said. And of course, you dont continue treatment if they dont lose weight.

    Public Citizen filed a request in 2002 with the FDA to pull Meridia off the market. The petition was denied in 2005, and the agency said the findings from todays Scout study would resolve questions about Meridias safety.

    This is a non-brainer, said Sidney Wolfe, health- research director for the consumer advocacy group in Washington. There is no evidence of any benefit. There were some groups that werent harmed, but thats not good enough. It should have never been on the market and its long overdue to come off the market.

    To contact the reporter on this story: Michelle Fay Cortez in Minneapolis at [email protected]
 
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