Feds OK First Approved Over-the-Counter Diet Pill

Amused

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Apr 14, 2001
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Feds OK Over-the-Counter Diet Pill
By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID
AP
WASHINGTON (Feb. 8) - The nation's ongoing battle against obesity has a new weapon - the first government-approved diet pill that can be bought without a prescription.

Intended only for people 18 and older, the drug, called alli, is a reduced-strength version of the prescription diet drug Xenical.

The Food and Drug Administration on Wednesday announced its approval of sales of the lower-dose drug without a prescription, with officials stressing that it needs to be used in combination with a diet and exercise program.

"Using this drug alone is unlikely to be beneficial," said Dr. Charles Ganley, FDA's director of nonprescription products.

The new drug will be sold by GlaxoSmithKline PLC and the company said it is expected to be in stores by summer. While the final price has not been determined, it is expected to be about $1- to $2-a-day. Xenical is made by Roche Holding AG.

While some dietary supplements make weight loss claims, Ganley said this is the first nonprescription drug approved by the agency for that purpose.

Ganley said in trials, for every 5 pounds people lost through diet and exercise, those using alli lost an added 2 to 3 pounds.

When taken with meals the drug - known generically as orlistat - blocks the absorption of about one-quarter of any fat consumed. That fat - about 150 to 200 calories worth - is passed out of the body in stools, which can be loose as a result. About half of patients in trials experienced gastrointestinal side effects.

The new drug would contain half the dose of Xenical prescription capsules.

Also, FDA said people who have had organ transplants should not take over-the-counter orlistat because of possible drug interactions. In addition, anyone taking blood thinning medicines or being treated for diabetes or thyroid disease should consult a physician before using orlistat, the agency said.

GSK Consumer Healthcare, which will market the pill, said it chose the name alli - pronounced AL-eye - to indicate a partnership with consumers in their weight-loss efforts.

"We know that being overweight has many adverse consequences, including an increase in the risk of heart disease and type 2 diabetes," said Dr. Douglas Throckmorton, deputy director for the FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research.

"OTC orlistat, along with diet and exercise, may aid overweight adults who seek to lose excess weight to improve their health," he said.

But Dr. Sidney M. Wolfe, director of Public Citizen's Health Research Group called the approval "the height of recklessness."

Wolfe said studies have associated the prescription version of the drug with precancerous lesions of the colon.

Wolfe had opposed the switch to over-the counter sale, calling the plan a "dangerous mistake in light of its marginal benefits, frequent coexistence of other diseases, common, bothersome adverse reactions, significant inhibition of absorption of fat soluble vitamins."
 

Zap

Elite Member
Oct 13, 1999
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Huh huh huh p00p!

Well, I like how this is supposed to work, rather than other "herbal" pills which try to increase metabolism, thus making people have heart attacks. Dunno... I can see how in some cases losing weight may be more beneficial than the risk of potential side effects. Question is... will someone buying this over the counter know enough to judge the tradeoff? A doctor probably can, but someone fixated on losing weight probably can't.

Note how "it needs to be used in combination with a diet and exercise program." No free ride. People that have the willpower to adjust their diet and exercise regularly probably don't need this pill anyways.

I'm guessing people will be buying this pill and using it without adjusting diet or exercising at all.
 

Amused

Elite Member
Apr 14, 2001
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Originally posted by: Zap
Huh huh huh p00p!

Well, I like how this is supposed to work, rather than other "herbal" pills which try to increase metabolism, thus making people have heart attacks. Dunno... I can see how in some cases losing weight may be more beneficial than the risk of potential side effects. Question is... will someone buying this over the counter know enough to judge the tradeoff? A doctor probably can, but someone fixated on losing weight probably can't.

Note how "it needs to be used in combination with a diet and exercise program." No free ride. People that have the willpower to adjust their diet and exercise regularly probably don't need this pill anyways.

I'm guessing people will be buying this pill and using it without adjusting diet or exercising at all.

From reading the drug's website, the studies mixed diet and the drug, but no exercise is mentioned in the clinical studies.

Diet is important because the more fat one eats, the more severe the side effects. High fat diets and the use of this drug cause extreme and often uncontrollable bowl issues.

Which may be a good thing, because with consequences like that for eating too much fat, this may help break a high-fat addiction is some people. Much like drugs that make people sick when they take their illegal drug of choice or alcohol.
 

tw1164

Diamond Member
Dec 8, 1999
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If they don't switch to a low fat diet, they'll be have the runs all the time. Wonder if you have to eat more vitamin K, like you had when you ate those fat free chips a few years ago.
 

Amused

Elite Member
Apr 14, 2001
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Originally posted by: tw1164
If they don't switch to a low fat diet, they'll be have the runs all the time. Wonder if you have to eat more vitamin K, like you had when you ate those fat free chips a few years ago.

Yes, a multi vitamin in required.
 

vi edit

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 28, 1999
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Originally posted by: Amused
Originally posted by: tw1164
If they don't switch to a low fat diet, they'll be have the runs all the time. Wonder if you have to eat more vitamin K, like you had when you ate those fat free chips a few years ago.

Yes, a multi vitamin in required.

Or you could just have a spinach salad and call it good. But I'm guessing if you are taking anal leakage pills in the first place a spinach salad probably isn't in your typical meal plan.

:p
 
Aug 23, 2000
15,509
1
81
Originally posted by: Amused
Originally posted by: Zap
Huh huh huh p00p!

Well, I like how this is supposed to work, rather than other "herbal" pills which try to increase metabolism, thus making people have heart attacks. Dunno... I can see how in some cases losing weight may be more beneficial than the risk of potential side effects. Question is... will someone buying this over the counter know enough to judge the tradeoff? A doctor probably can, but someone fixated on losing weight probably can't.

Note how "it needs to be used in combination with a diet and exercise program." No free ride. People that have the willpower to adjust their diet and exercise regularly probably don't need this pill anyways.

I'm guessing people will be buying this pill and using it without adjusting diet or exercising at all.

From reading the drug's website, the studies mixed diet and the drug, but no exercise is mentioned in the clinical studies.

Diet is important because the more fat one eats, the more severe the side effects. High fat diets and the use of this drug cause extreme and often uncontrollable bowl issues.

Which may be a good thing, because with consequences like that for eating too much fat, this may help break a high-fat addiction is some people. Much like drugs that make people sick when they take their illegal drug of choice or alcohol.

Do we really need fat people to have uncontrolable bowels? They might be to slow to get to the toilet in time.
 

techs

Lifer
Sep 26, 2000
28,559
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I tried the Olestra fat subsitute potato chips a few years ago and they gave me severe cramps. So I am wondering how bad the side effects of Alli will be.
 

Amused

Elite Member
Apr 14, 2001
57,475
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Originally posted by: techs
I tried the Olestra fat subsitute potato chips a few years ago and they gave me severe cramps. So I am wondering how bad the side effects of Alli will be.

The side effects are directly proportional to the amount of fat you consume.