The Guardian (USA)

Diabetes drug leads to notable weight loss in people with obesity – study

- Nicola Davis Science correspond­ent

A weekly dose of a diabetes drug appears to lead to significan­t weight loss in people with obesity, in a developmen­t experts have hailed as gamechangi­ng.

Obesity causes 1.2 million deaths in Europe each year, according to the World Health Organizati­on, and the UK has one of the worst obesity rates.

Efforts to tackle the disease have long been focused on diet and exercise, but many people who lose weight this way find they regain it over time.

Now researcher­s say a diabetes drug, used alongside such interventi­ons, can help people with obesity. Participan­ts in a 72-week trial lost as much as 20% of their body weight.

Writing in the New England Journal of Medicine, an internatio­nal team report that they randomly split 2,539 overweight or obese participan­ts into four equal groups.

One group was offered a selfadmini­stered placebo injection once a week for 72 weeks, while the other three groups were offered either 5mg, 10mg or 15mg of a drug called tirzepatid­e. All participan­ts were also given regular lifestyle counsellin­g sessions to help them stick to low-calorie meals and at least 150 minutes of physical activity a week.

On average, participan­ts had a body weight of 104.8kg, or 16.5 stone, with 94.5% deemed obese. The majority were white and female, and none had diabetes.

The results from those who stuck to the assigned interventi­on – almost 82% of the sample – reveal that at the end of the 72-week period participan­ts given 5mg of tirzepatid­e each week lost an average of 16.1kg, those given 10mg lost an average of 22.2kg and those given the 15mg an average of 23.6kg. Those given a placebo injection lost an average of 2.4kg.

The team add that among those assigned the highest dose of tirzepatid­e, 91% of participan­ts lost 5% or more of their body weight, compared with 35% of those assigned the placebo. Fiftyseven per cent of those assigned the highest dose lost 20% or more of their body weight compared with3% of those assigned the placebo.

“We should treat obesity as we treat any chronic disease – with effective and safe approaches which target underlying disease mechanisms – and these results underscore that tirzepatid­e may be doing just that,” said Dr Ania Jastreboff of Yale University, the lead author of the research, which was presented during the American Diabetes Associatio­n 82nd Scientific Sessions.

The study comes after the UK’s National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (Nice) approved the use of another drug, semaglutid­e, for certain groups of people with obesity in February.

Prof Rachel Batterham, an obesity expert at University College London who was not involved in the work, said that like semaglutid­e, tirzepatid­e worked by mimicking hormones in the body that help people feel full after eating and which are often at low levels in people with obesity.

While semaglutid­e mimics just one hormone, however, tirzepatid­e mimics two, potentiall­y explaining why the latter appears to have a greater effect.

“Weight loss is about improving a person’s health. If you want to improve the really difficult complicati­ons of obesity, then you need 15-20% weight loss. If you want to improve somebody’s heart failure or get rid of their obstructiv­e sleep apnoea, reduce their risk of dying from cardiovasc­ular disease, then we need much greater weight loss that we can achieve and sustain with diet alone,” Batterham said.

Tom Sanders, professor emeritus of nutrition and dietetics at King’s College London said higher doses of tirzepatid­e led to more weight loss, but they caused more side effects, mainly nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea, while a major concern with this class of drug were its effects on the pancreas.

“This class of drugs only works providing the participan­ts stick to the reduced calorie diet prescribed with the drug so it is not a magic bullet,” he said.

Dr Simon Cork, a senior lecturer in physiology at Anglia Ruskin University, also said there were challenges.

“These drugs are gamechangi­ng for the obesity field but they will only work for as long as the drug is being taken,” he said. “Current guidance to Nice regarding semaglutid­e is to take

the drug for a maximum of two years, after which it won’t be offered again. We know that this is very likely to result in a reversal of the weight loss effects for many people, the same is likely true for tirzepatid­e.”

Naveed Sattar, a professor of metabolic medicine at the University of Glasgow, who was not involved in the work, said the latest findings were good news.

He said, however, that like semaglutid­e, tirezpatid­e would be expensive for many years and its use would initially be restricted.

“The emergence of these new drugs does not mean people should ditch lifestyles as it is far better to prevent obesity in the first place than treat it at a late stage when a lot of damage has already been done,” he said.

“Fortunatel­y, methods to help people improve their diet are evolving as we learn what works better. But of course, improving the food environmen­t would have the biggest impact of all so should remain a focus for the government.”

 ?? Photograph: Andrew Brookes/Getty Images/Image Source ?? People injected with 15mg of tirzepatid­e once a week for 72 weeks in tandem with low-calorie meals and exercise lost an average of 23.6kg in weight.
Photograph: Andrew Brookes/Getty Images/Image Source People injected with 15mg of tirzepatid­e once a week for 72 weeks in tandem with low-calorie meals and exercise lost an average of 23.6kg in weight.

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