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UK: Single pill tackles smoking and obesity

Jeremy Laurance

The Independent

Wednesday 10 Mar 2004

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A single pill that tackles obesity and smoking could become the next
pharmaceutical industry blockbuster after scientists revealed its first
results yesterday.

Rimonabant, made by the French company Sanofi-Synthelabo, has been shown in
two separate American trials to speed weight loss in overweight patients
and to double the number of people stopping smoking while preventing
subsequent weight gain.

The twin effects of rimonabant on two of the Western world's dominant
cravings could give it a crucial advantage over other drugs on the market.
Preventing weight gain after giving up smoking would remove one of the
greatest disincentives for those trying to kick the habit.

Rimonabant is involved in seven trials in more than 13,000 patients around
the world. It works by blocking cannabis receptors in the brain and was
discovered after researchers decided to investigate why cannabis smokers
developed the "munchies", the fierce appetite that often accompanies
smoking of the drug.

First results presented to the American College of Cardiology meeting in
New Orleans yesterday showed that among 1,036 overweight patients treated
for a year in Canada, those given the highest dose of rimonabant lost an
average of 8.6kg (1st 5lb), compared with 2.3kg (5lb) for those on placebos.

In a second trial in 787 heavy smokers treated for 10 weeks in the US, 36
per cent of those given rimonabant had stopped smoking, compared with 20
per cent of those on placebo. Those on the drug, brand name Acomplia, lost
half a pound weight on average, while those on placebos gained 2.5lb.

Robert Anthenelli, one of the lead researchers in the second trial from the
University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, said: "Since these two
studies show that rimonabant treats obesity and related metabolic disorders
in overweight and obese patients, and also helps people quit smoking
without significant post-cessation weight gain, we may have a very
promising new approach for managing two major and preventable risk factors
for cardiovascular disease with one and the same drug."

British experts welcomed the results. Ian Campbell, chairman of the
National Obesity Forum, described the findings as "very positive" . "To
achieve an 8kg weight loss over one year is as good as other medications
that are available," he said. "I would look forward to the two-year results
because once you have got weight down maintaining weight loss is crucial.
If it can prevent weight gain in people who stop smoking that could be its
unique selling point."

Professor Martin Jarvis, an expert on smoking at University College London,
said: "These are encouraging results. I know people are excited about it.
For years everyone has been searching for a drug that is effective in
reducing weight and doesn't have nasty side-effects. Lowered weight gain
after stopping smoking would be an added bonus. Given how obesity is
galloping away it must have a potentially really big market."

Rimonabant is the first of a new class of drugs called selective CB1
blockers which act on the addictive pathway in the brain associated with
regulating the body's intake of food and tobacco dependency. Research
suggests the drug taps into pathways associated with the pleasure obtained
by eating, smoking tobacco or smoking cannabis. CB1 receptors are also
found in fat cells and have a role in fat and glucose metabolism.

The drug is expected to be on the market in the UK next year.

 

 

 

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