The Daily Telegraph

‘Holy grail’ pill beats middle-age spread

Most effective weight-loss pill yet helps mature adults shed nine pounds on average

- By Laura Donnelly Health editor in Munich

A BREAKTHROU­GH drug that directly targets middle-age spread could help millions of overweight Britons lose weight.

Slimmers taking the pills lost three times as much weight as those simply trying to diet and exercise, a landmark trial found. The drug also cut the risk of diabetes by a fifth.

Experts hailed the drug, called lorcaserin, as the most effective weight-loss pill yet, suggesting it could help the two in three adults who are currently battling weight problems.

The approach could be the “holy grail” in the battle to combat obesity, they said.

The American research, which tracked 12,000 obese or overweight adults, found that four in 10 of those taking the drug lost a significan­t amount of weight over the course of a year.

On average, slimmers taking the twice-daily pills lost 9lb – around a dress size for the average woman – while those who stuck to traditiona­l diet plans shed just 3lb.

And more than three years after the trial began, those taking the pills had kept the weight off, the study found.

Scientists said the drug was an “important milestone” after decades of failed attempts to to develop effective diet medication to combat the growing global obesity epidemic.

Until now, drugs that showed early promise have had little success – or been dogged by safety concerns, in particular about potential dangers to the heart. Harvard researcher­s said their results, presented at the world’s largest cardiac conference, showed for the first time that a drug could cause consistent and sustained weight loss with no such risks.

Scientists said the breakthrou­gh was particular­ly significan­t because the drug targets signals in the brain that have been linked to weight gain in middle age.

The drug works by activating the neurons in the brain that control “satiety” – signalling fullness.

These neurons become less efficient with age, which is believed to be a key cause of middle-age spread.

Experts said the new drug – which is currently licensed in the US, and costs around £220 a month – works by reinvigora­ting the cells, helping people better control their appetite.

Eisai, the drug maker, said it was now evaluating the findings, ahead of any applicatio­n for a European licence.

Prof Jason Halford, an obesity expert at the University of Liverpool, said the drug could help millions of Britons if it was given the go-ahead by the NHS.

“We don’t have any appetite suppressan­ts available on the NHS. We have a massive great gap between lifestyle modificati­on and surgery. At the moment you either get support and advice, or you get surgery – there is nothing in-between,” he said.

“This could be widely prescribed if it is approved by Nice (the National Institute of Health and Care Excellence) in the UK,” he said.

The findings, presented at the European Society of Cardiology conference

in Munich, and published in the New England Journal of Medicine, yesterday prompted excitement among obesity and cardiac experts.

Tam Fry, of the National Obesity Forum, said it was the “holy grail” of antiobesit­y medication.

The only weight-loss drug currently available on the NHS is orlistat – which stops fat being absorbed into the body.

For years, attempts to develop “centrally acting” appetite suppressor­s – which make people feel they are full more quickly – have been beset with difficulti­es because until now they have also caused cardiac problems.

The findings suggest the new approach is around twice as effective as orlistat, which can have unpleasant side effects.

While 21 per cent of those taking orlistat lost at least five per cent of their total body weight after one year, the new trial found 37 per cent of dieters lost this much weight after 12 months on lorcaserin.

And those on the new drug also saw the risk of developing diabetes fall by 19 per cent, compared with those given a placebo. Erin Bohula, a cardiovasc­ular medicine and critical care specialist at Harvard’s Brigham and Women’s Hospital and the lead author, said the findings were an “important milestone” after decades of failed attempts to develop a safe drug, while global obesity rates have tripled.

“We have been able to demonstrat­e for the first time in a rigorous, randomised way that this weight loss drug does what it is intended to do without causing an increase in adverse cardiovasc­ular events in a population at higher risk for heart attacks and strokes,” she said.

While rates of major cardiac events were almost identical in those taking the drug, compared with the control group, those on the pills saw “small but significan­t” improvemen­ts in several factors linked to heart disease – including blood pressure, heart rate and blood sugar levels, the study found.

Prof Jeremy Pearson, associate medical director at the British Heart Foundation, said the findings were “reassuring” after a “long and generally unhappy” history of attempts at success in the field.

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