If obesity is, in fact, a disease, the majority of Americans have it. Over one third of Americans are obese and well over two-thirds are overweight. And here in the U.S., we treat diseases with drugs. Coincidentally, two new drugs, Belviq and Qsymia, entered the market shortly after the AMA began calling obesity a disease. These drugs are the first weight loss medications to receive FDA approval in over a decade.
Until very recently, much of the medical community considered weight loss drugs to be vanity products. However, with the rise in obesity in the United States comes a rise in heart disease, depression, type 2 diabetes and some cancers. These drugs may have the potential to prevent the onset of some of these conditions.
Belviq and Qsymia are recommended for patients with similar problems. Both are recommended for obesity, or a body mass index higher than 30. If you are overweight, with a body mass index of 27 or higher, most doctors will recommend that you have type 2 diabetes, high blood pressure or high cholesterol before using either medication. Pregnant women should not take these drugs.
The major difference between Belviq and most other weight loss drugs or weight management aids is that it actually provides a feeling of satiety. The drug works on serotonin transmitters in the brain to make users feel full. They simply don’t have to eat as much as they would without it.
Qsymia combines two currently approved drugs. The first is an appetite suppressant called phentermine. This is the safer part of the infamous fen-phen weight loss aid. The other half is a seizure and/or migraine drug called topiramate, which can cause feelings of fullness, and increase calorie burning.
“Obesity threatens the overall well being of patients and is a major public health concern,” said Janet Woodcock, M.D., director of the FDA’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research in a press release. “Qsymia, used responsibly in combination with a healthy lifestyle that includes a reduced-calorie diet and exercise, provides another treatment option for chronic weight management in Americans who are obese or are overweight and have at least one weight-related comorbid condition.”
Neither Belviq nor Qsymia is a miracle cure. Weight loss with both drugs is moderate for most users. Patients in clinical trials went from an average 227 pounds to 204 pounds on Qsymia. On Belviq, patients’ average weight dropped from 220 to 207.
About 47 percent of Belviq users without type 2 diabetes lost at least 5 percent of their body weight compared with about 23 percent of patients treated with placebo. In users with type 2 diabetes, about 38 percent of patients treated with Belviq and 16 percent treated with placebo lost at least 5 percent of their body weight. Belviq labeling recommends that drug use be discontinued in patients fail to lose 5 percent of their body weight after 12 weeks of treatment, as these patients are unlikely to achieve clinically meaningful weight loss with continued treatment.
Diet drugs have been around in different forms for years. It will likely take years to see if either of these new drugs makes a dent in America’s obesity epidemic.
(obesity / shutterstock)