Yorkshire Post

Weight-loss pill may be ‘holy grail’

Researcher­s say drug safe for the heart

- STEVE TEALE NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk ■ Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

HEALTH: Weight-loss pill Lorcaserin has been hailed as a potential “holy grail” in the fight against obesity after a major study showed that it did not increase the risk of serious heart problems.

A WEIGHT-LOSS pill has been hailed as a potential “holy grail” in the fight against obesity after a major study showed it did not increase the risk of serious heart problems.

Researcher­s say Lorcaserin is the first weight-loss drug to be deemed safe for heart health with long-term use, which could see regulators approve it for prescripti­on on the NHS.

Taken twice a day, the drug is an appetite suppressan­t which works by stimulatin­g brain chemicals to induce a feeling of fullness.

A US study saw 12,000 people who were either obese or overweight given the pills or a placebo – with those who took the drug shedding an average of nine pounds in 40 months.

Further analysis showed no big difference­s in tests for heart valve damage.

Tam Fry, of the National Obesity Forum, said the drug is potentiall­y the “holy grail” of weightloss medicine. “I think it is the thing everybody has been looking for,” he said.

“I think there will be several holy grails, but this is a holy grail and one which has been certainly at the back of the mind of a lot of specialist­s for a long time.”

“But all of the other things apply – lifestyle change has got to be root and branch part of this.”

Professor Jason Halford, an obesity expert at the University of Liverpool, told The Daily Tele

graph that the drug’s availabili­ty in the UK depends on whether it is approved by NHS regulators.

“We don’t have any appetite suppressan­ts available on the NHS. We have a massive great gap between lifestyle modificati­on and surgery,” he said.

“At the moment you either get support and advice, or you get to surgery – there is nothing in between.

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

The Food and Drug Administra­tion, the US medicines watch- dog, approved Lorcaserin’s use in some adults in 2012. The drug has been on sale there since 2013, where it costs between 220 and 290 dollars (£155-£225) a month.

The study into its long-term effects was led by Dr Erin Bohula, a cardiovasc­ular medicine expert at the Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women’s Hospital.

She said: “Patients and their doctors have been nervous about using drugs to treat obesity and for good reason. There’s a history of these drugs having serious complicati­ons.”

As well as affecting the heart, there are concerns weight-loss drugs can lead to mental health issues.

The results of the study into Lorcaserin were discussed at the European Society of Cardiology in Munich on Sunday and have been published by the New England Journal of Medicine.

The researcher­s found after one year 39 per cent of participan­ts given Lorcaserin had lost at least five per cent of their starting weight, compared with 17 per cent of those given placebo. Analysis also showed fewer people taking Lorcaserin developed diabetes, 8.5 per cent compared with 10.3 per cent on placebo.

Tests for heart valve damage were done on 3,270 participan­ts, but no significan­t difference­s in rates were identified. Suicidal thoughts or behaviour were reported in 21 people taking lorcaserin compared with 11 people given placebo, however those taking the weight-loss drug had a history of depression.

We don’t have any appetite suppressan­ts available on the NHS. Professor Jason Halford, an obesity expert at the University of Liverpool.

 ??  ?? JASON HALFORD: Said drug’s UK availabili­ty depends on whether it is approved by regulators.
JASON HALFORD: Said drug’s UK availabili­ty depends on whether it is approved by regulators.

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