| Literature DB >> 21197148 |
Lisa L Ioannides-Demos1, Loretta Piccenna, John J McNeil.
Abstract
Past therapies for the treatment of obesity have typically involved pharmacological agents usually in combination with a calorie-controlled diet. This paper reviews the efficacy and safety of pharmacotherapies for obesity focusing on drugs approved for long-term therapy (orlistat), drugs approved for short-term use (amfepramone [diethylpropion], phentermine), recently withdrawn therapies (rimonabant, sibutamine) and drugs evaluated in Phase III studies (taranabant, pramlintide, lorcaserin and tesofensine and combination therapies of topiramate plus phentermine, bupropion plus naltrexone, and bupropion plus zonisamide). No current pharmacotherapy possesses the efficacy needed to produce substantial weight loss in morbidly obese patients. Meta-analyses support a significant though modest loss in bodyweight with a mean weight difference of 4.7 kg (95% CI 4.1 to 5.3 kg) for rimonabant, 4.2 kg (95% CI 3.6 to 4.8 kg) for sibutramine and 2.9 kg (95% CI 2.5 to 3.2 kg) for orlistat compared to placebo at ≥12 months. Of the Phase III pharmacotherapies, lorcaserin, taranabant, topiramate and bupropion with naltrexone have demonstrated significant weight loss compared to placebo at ≥12 months. Some pharmacotherapies have also demonstrated clinical benefits. Further studies are required in some populations such as younger and older people whilst the long term safety continues to be a major consideration and has led to the withdrawal of several drugs.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21197148 PMCID: PMC3006492 DOI: 10.1155/2011/179674
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Obes ISSN: 2090-0708
Drugs used for weight loss in obesity.
| Drug | Introduced | Mechanism of action | Status |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dinitrophenol | 1930s | Increases metabolic rate | Withdrawn—risk of neuropathy and cataracts |
| Amphetamines: dexamphetamine, methamphetamine | 1936 | Appetite suppression | Banned, restricted or discouraged—dependency and abuse potential, cardiovascular adverse effects |
| Amphetamine-like analogues: Phentermine, diethylpropion, phenylpropanolamine | 1959-US | Appetite suppression | Diethylpropion—available for short-term use (≤12 weeks) |
| Phentermine—available for short-term use (≤12 weeks) in some countries, withdrawn 2000 (UK) | |||
| Phenylpropanolamine-withdrawn 2000—increased risk haemorrhagic stroke | |||
| Aminorex | 1965 | Appetite suppression | Withdrawn 1968—pulmonary hypertension |
| Mazindol | 1970s | Appetite suppression | Discontinued 1993—Australia |
| Fenfluramine | 1963-Europe 1973-US | Appetite suppression | Withdrawn 1997—valvular heart disease, pulmonary hypertension |
| Dexfenfluramine | 1985-Europe 1996-US | Appetite suppression | Withdrawn 1997—valvular heart disease, pulmonary hypertension |
| Orlistat | 1998-Europe and US | Decreased fat absorption | Also available |
| Sibutramine | 1997-US 2001-Europe | Appetite suppression | Temporarily withdrawn 2002 Italy-concerns of raised risk of heart attacks and strokes |
| Increase in contraindications 2010-US, Australia | |||
| Suspension of market authorization 2010 | |||
| Rimonabant | 2006-Europe | Withdrawn 2009—potential of serious psychiatric disorders | |
Central mechanisms of action of anti-obesity pharmacotherapies.
| Central Subsystem | Drugs targets | Possible receptor subtypes involved |
|---|---|---|
| Monoamine system (indirect agonists and subtype selective receptor antagonists) | Single therapies | |
| (i) Dex/fenfluramine (WD), fluoxetine | (i) 5HT | |
| (ii) Phentermine/Diethylpropion (ST) | (ii) DA, NA | |
| (iii) Sibutramine | (iii) | |
| (iv) Bupropion | (iv) DA, NA | |
| (v) Tesofensine | (v) DA, NA, 5HT | |
| (vi) Lorcaserin | (vi) 5HT2C | |
| Opioid system ( | (i) Naltrexone | (i) |
| (ii) Topiramate | (ii) AMPA/kainite glutamate* | |
| (iii) Zonisamide | (iii) 5HT, DA* | |
| Cannabinoid system | Single therapies: | |
| (i) Rimonabant (WD) | (i) CB1 | |
| (ii) Taranabant (DC) | (ii) CB1 | |
| Monoamine/Opioid system | Bupropion/naltrexone | (i) DA, NA/ |
| Bupropion/zonisamide | (ii) DA, NA/5HT, DA* | |
| Neuropeptide Y/Agouti-related peptide system | Pramlintide/metreleptin | (i) Calcitonin receptor*/Leptin receptor |
5HT: serotonergic, DA: dopaminergic, NA: noradrenergic, WD:withdrawn; DC: phase III trials discontinued; ST: short term; *: unknown; AMPA: α-amino-3-hydroxyl-5-methyl-4-isoxazole-propionate.
Figure 1Overview of central and peripheral functions associated with anti-obesity pharmacotherapies.
Comparative efficacy of pharmacotherapy from recent meta-analyses of long-term studies in adults (12 months or more).
| Drug | No. of studies | Total subjects | Mean weight difference (kg) (95% CI) | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rimonabant | 4 | Placebo: ~1600 Rimonabant: ~2500 | 4.7 (4.1, 5.3) | [ |
| Orlistat | 14 | Placebo: 4509 | 2.9 (2.5, 3.2) | [ |
| Sibutramine | 7 | Placebo: 699 Sibutramine: 837 | 4.2 (3.6, 4.8) | [ |
| Sibutramine Orlistat | 5 | Sibutramine: 229 Orlistat: 249 | 3.4 (2.3, 4.6) | [ |
| Bupropion* | 5 | Bupropion: 618 | 2.8 kg (1.1 to 4.5 kg) | [ |
CI: confidence interval; * 6 to 12 month studies.
Note: another meta-analysis of 5 studies with rimonabant compared to placebo, did not provide mean weight difference in kg, however the odds ratio was 1.07 (95% CI 0.9, 1.3) [60].
Recent randomised controlled trials of weight loss therapies with 6-month followup.
| Drug | No. subjects | Outcomes | Serious adverse events | Reference | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Absolute weight loss (kg) (95% CI) | ≥5% weight loss | ≥10% weight loss | Change in WC (cm) | ||||
| Bupropion (400 mg) plus Naltrexone | Placebo-85 | 0.9 ± 0.5 | 15% | 2% | −0.9 ± 0.9 | Nausea: 3.5% P, 28.1% BN16, 39.7% BN32, 41% BN48 | [ |
| N 48 mg-56 B-60 | 1.1 ± 0.7 | 10% | 2% | −3.8 ± 1.2 | |||
| BN16 mg-64 | 2.6 ± 0.6 | 26% | 7% | −2.9 ± 1.1 | |||
| 5.1 ± 0.6 | 52%, | 17%, | −3.7 ± 1.1, | ||||
| BN 32 mg-63 | 5.1 ± 0.6 | 51%, | 19%, | −4.6 ± 1.0, | |||
| BN 48 mg-61 | 4.0 ± 0.6 | 39%, | 15%, | −4.7 ± 1.2, | |||
| Bupropion (120 mg/360 mg) + Zonisamide (360 mg/360 mg) | 729 (total) | 1.4∧ P | 15%∧ P | 4%∧ P | NA | NA | [ |
| 3.2∧ Z120 | 27%∧ Z120 44%∧ Z360 | 9%∧ Z120 | |||||
| 2.3∧ B360 | 21%∧ B360 | 11%∧ B360 | |||||
| 6.1∧ ZB120 | 47%∧ ZB120 ( | 25%∧ ZB120 | |||||
| Rimonabant | P-417 | 0.5 (0.3, 1.3) | NR | NR | 1.0 (−0.2, 1.9) | Psychiatric: 28.4% P, 43.4% R, | [ |
| R-422 | 4.3 (3.5, 5.1) | 4.5 (−3.7, −5.4), | Severe psychiatric: 3.5% P, 4.8% R, | ||||
| Rimonabant* | 3165 (total) | Placebo 1.6 | 19.7% | 7.8% | 6.4 | Depression: 0.8% P, 1.9% R, NS Anxiety: 0.3 P, 1.0% R, NS | [ |
| Tesofensine | Placebo-52 | 2.2 (0.9, 3.5) | 13 (29%) | 3 (7%) | −2.4 (0.7, 4.2) | Anger and hostility: 4% P, 14.3% T 1 mg, | [ |
| T 0.25 mg-52 | 6.7 (5.4, 8.0), | 29 (59%) | 17 (35%) | −5.9 (4.0, 7.8), | Increased confusion: P-NA, | ||
| T 0.5 mg-50 | 11.3 (9.9, 12.7), | 41 (87%) | 25 (53%) | –9 | T 0.5 mg | ||
| T 1.0 mg-49 | 12 | 42 (91%) | 34 (74%) | –9 | T 1 mg | ||
Absolute weight loss: weight loss from baseline; NS: not significant; NR: not recorded; WC: waist circumference; P: placebo; B: bupropion; N: naltrexone; Z: zonisamide; R: rimonabant; T: tesofensine; NA: not available; *pooled non-diabetic patients; #mean ± standard deviation; ∧estimated absolute weight based on mean baseline weight of 100 kg.
Recent randomised controlled trials of weight loss therapies with 12-month followup.
| Drug | No. subjects | Outcomes | Serious adverse events | Reference | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Absolute weight loss (kg) (95% CI) | ≥5% weight loss | ≥10% weight loss | Change in WC (cm) | ||||
| Lorcaserin | Placebo-716 | 2.16 ± 0.14∧ | 20.3% | 7.7% | 3.9 ± 0.2 | Headache 2% P, 0.8% L | [ |
| L-883 | 5.81 ± 0.16 | 47.5% | 22.6% | 6.8 ± 0.2 | Dizziness 0.8% P, 0.1% L | ||
| Taranabant | Placebo-417 | 2.6 (1.8, 3.3) | 27.2% | 8.4% | −3.1 (2.3, 3.9) | Nausea 6.5% P, 16.7% TB 2 mg, 21.4% TB 4 mg, | [ |
| TB 2 mg-415 | 6.6 (5.9, 7.4), | 56.5%, | 27.9%, | −7.0 (6.1, 8.1), | Vomiting 3.4% P, 8.4 TB 4 mg, | ||
| TB 4 mg-414 | 8.1 (7.4, 8.9), | 64.2%, | 35.8%, | −7.5 (6.7, 8.3), | Diarrhoea 7.2% P, 12.3 TB 2 mg, | ||
| Taranabant | Placebo-196 | +1.7 (0.8, 2.7) | 62.2% | NR | −0.7 (−0.3, 1.8) | Irritability TB 1 mg and 2 mg, | [ |
| TB 0.5 mg-196 | 0.1 (−1.0, 0.8), | 71.8% | NR | −1.5 (−2.6, −0.5) | |||
| TB 1 mg-196 | 0.6 (−1.5, 0.4), | 78%, | NR | −2.3 (−3.4, −1.3) | |||
| TB 2 mg-196 | 1.2 (−2.1, −0.3), | 83.3%, | NR | −2.4 (−3.4, −1.3) | |||
| Taranabant | Placebo-137 | 1.4 (−0.5, −2.4) | 24.3% | 7.3% | −3.0 (−1.9, −4.1) | Psychiatric-17.7% P, 28.8% TB1mg, 29%TB 2 mg, | [ |
| TB 0.5 mg-141 | 5.0 (−4.0, −5.9), | 44.2, | 21.3, | −5.6 (−4.5, −6.6), | |||
| TB 1 mg-138 | 5.2 (−4.2, −6.2), | 45.3, | 18.2, | −5.7 (−4.6, −6.7), | |||
| TB 2 mg-277 | 6.4 (−5.7, −7.2), | 53, | 28, | −6.9 (−6.1, −7.7), | |||
| Bupropion/naltrexone* | Placebo-202 | 7.3% ± 0.9% | 60.4% | 30.2% | −6.8 (5.3, 8.3) | Nausea 10.5% P, 34.1% BN | [ |
| BN 360/32–591 | 11.5% ± 0.6%, | 80.4%, | 55.2%, | −10.0 (9.0, 10.9), | Dizziness 4.5% P, 14.6% BN, | ||
| Bupropion/naltrexone | B-60 | 2.7 ± 0.9 | 33% | 12% | NA | NA | [ |
| BN 16 mg-64 | 5.0 ± 0.9 | 50% | 22% | ||||
| BN 32 mg-63 | 6.1 ± 0.8, | 51% | 25% | ||||
| BN 48 mg-61 | 4.6 ± 0.9 | 39% | 20% | ||||
| Pramlintide | Placebo-63Pramlintide-61 | 2.1 ± 0.9 | 3% | 11% | NR | Nausea 0% P, 30% Pramlintide | [ |
| Topiramate | Placebo-55 | 2.5 ± 3.1 | 19% | 2% | −2.3 ± 4.7 | Paraesthesia −0% P, 28% TPsychiatric −11% P, 33% T | [ |
| Topiramate/phentermine | P-498 | 1.6 | 17% | NA | NA | NA | [ |
| TP 3.75/23 mg-234 | 5.1, | 45%, | |||||
| TP15/92 mg-498 | 11, | 67%, | |||||
| Topiramate/phentermine | P-979 | 1.8 | 21% | NA | NA | NA | [ |
| TP 7.5/46 mg-488 | 8.4, | 62%, | |||||
| TP15/92 mg-981 | 10.4, | 70%, | |||||
Absolute weight loss: weight loss from baseline; NS: not significant, NA: not available; L: lorcaserin; NB: naltrexone/bupropion, TB: taranabant; T: topiramate controlled release; TP: topiramate/phentermine; ∧mean ± standard error; *both groups also received intensive behavior modification.
Recent randomised controlled trials of weight loss therapies with 2-years followup.
| Drug | No subjects | Outcomes | Serious adverse events | Reference | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Absolute weight loss (kg) (95% CI) | ≥5% weight loss | ≥10% weight loss | Change in WC (cm) | ||||
| Lorcaserin | P-684 | 3.0% ± 0.2% | 50.3% | 7.7% | 4.3 ± 0.2 | NS | [ |
| L-564 | 7.0% ± 0.2% | 67.9% | 22.6% | 8.1 ± 0.2 | |||
| Taranabant | P-244 | 1.4 (0.3, 2.5) | 30.3% | 13.4 | −2.7 (1.5, 3.8) | NS | [ |
| TB 2 mg-264 | 6.4 (5.3, 7.4), | 59.6, | 33, | −6.3 (5.2, 7.4) | |||
| TB 4 mg-260 | 7.6 (6.5, 8.7), | 64.8, | 37.9, | −7.0 (5.9, 8.1), | |||
Absolute weight loss = weight loss from baseline; WC: waist circumference, NR: not recorded, TB: taranabant, NS: not significant; P: placebo; L: lorcaserin.