Khaleej Times

New diabetes drug to help cut weight

-

PAGE 25

trenton — US regulators on Tuesday approved a new diabetes drug that reduces blood sugar levels and also helps people lose significan­t weight.

Danish drugmaker Novo Nordisk said the Food and Drug Administra­tion approved its once-a-week shot for people with Type 2 diabetes. The drug, Ozempic, also known as semaglutid­e, works by stimulatin­g the body’s own insulin production and reducing appetite.

In one big company-funded study, Ozempic, on average, reduced long-term blood sugar levels at least 2 ½ times as much as a popular daily diabetes pill, Merck & Co’s Januvia. It also helped study participan­ts lose two to three times as much weight as those in the comparison group.

Over 56 weeks, patients who got a lower dose of Ozempic lost an average of 9.5 pounds while those who got a higher dose lost 13.5 pounds.

The patients who took Januvia lost an average of 4 pounds.

The 1,200 study participan­ts were also taking one or two standard diabetes medicines.

Novo Nordisk has also been testing the drug separately for weight loss alone.

Many Type 2 diabetes patients are overweight or obese, and losing significan­t weight usually helps them reduce their blood sugar and better control their diabetes. Over time, too high sugar in the blood can damage multiple organs and weaken circulatio­n.

The new drug comes in injector pens and costs about the same as similar weekly drugs: $676 for a four- to six-week supply without insurance.

Ozempic will compete with other popular once-a-week drugs in the same class, which don’t produce as much weight loss. However, they all carry warnings about possible serious side effects, including kidney damage and inflammati­on of the pancreas. — AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates