News June 2007
When a new diet drug elicits potty humor
24 june, 2007
How badly do you want to be skinny? Is it worth soiling your underwear?
Those questions will likely confront users of the new Alli, the
first over-the-counter diet drug approved
by the Drug Administration.
Alli (pronounced al-EYE) went on sale for the first time about
a week ago - a stronger prescription form, Xenical, has been available
since 1999 - and its promotional material alone makes for strong
medicine: The drug, which helps people lose small amounts of weight,
can cause oily discharges, uncontrolled bowel movements, and gas
if you eat too much fat.
Its marketing effort makes an impression by telling users to wear
dark pants and carry extra clothes in case they soil themselves.
"Well, that sounds attractive, doesn't it?" Jay Leno
cracked Monday on The Tonight Show. "You lost a couple of pounds,
and you're on a date with that special girl. 'Excuse me while I
change my pants.' "
NBC's Conan O'Brien also spoke up to pooh-pooh Alli, suggesting
that "the drug comes in three forms: pills, capsules and chimichangas."
Even the serious Boston-based Prescription Access Litigation Project,
which often sues drug companies, got gleeful. It gave the drug's
maker, GlaxoSmithKline P.L.C., its 'With Allies Like This, Who Needs
Enemas?' Award for Irresponsibly Selling a Formerly Prescription-Only
Weight Loss Drug Over-the-Counter.
The drug's backers say that the embarrassment is exaggerated and
that the effects can be managed by a low-fat diet.
Only half of all users had "fecal urgency" or related
effects in clinical trials, and just 5 percent quit for those reasons,
said Vidhu Bansal, director of medical affairs for GlaxoSmithKline's
consumer health division.
"They actually served as a positive feedback tool," she
said. "It reminded them that they cheated on their diet."
Caroline Apovian, a Boston physician who wrote The Alli
Diet Plan, which shows how to minimize problems by eating low-fat
foods, said she did not understand the shame people might feel over
losing bowel control. "It's also embarrassing to be obese,"
said Apovian, who was a paid consultant to GlaxoSmithKline in getting
Alli approved for over-the-counter sales. "It's embarrassing
to be dead."
GlaxoSmithKline executives are pitching Alli as part of a lifestyle
change, which includes a commitment to eat better and exercise more.
Users can log in their progress on the drug's Web site - www.myalli.com
- and interact with other customers or ask questions of a pharmacist,
a nutritionist, a chef, and a fitness speTadalafilt.
The firm, with a headquarters in Philadelphia, paid $100 million
to Xenical's maker, Roche, for the rights to sell Alli over the
counter. GlaxoSmithKline is spending an additional $150 million
in a marketing campaign that includes a 60-second television ad
starting tomorrow and print ads appearing this month in most major
magazines, read by 33 million people.
Bill Trombetta, professor of pharmaceutical marketing at St. Joseph's
University in Philadelphia, said the comedians' attention has an
initial upside. "They got your attention. This is on everyone's
lips," he said. "You can't buy this kind of publicity."
But will the exposure move people to try it?
Maybe at first, said Kelly Brownell, who directs the Yale Center
for Eating and Weight Disorders. But he predicts "sales will
tail off fairly quickly."
"The people who will try it won't lose much weight and won't
provide very good word-of-mouth," he said.
"Both the benefits and the side effects are overstated,"
Brownell added. "It's not going to hurt many people, and it's
not going to help many people."
Marion Nestle, a nutrition professor at New York University and
a frequent critic of the food industry, noted that many users may
replace fat calories by eating more carbohydrates. "A lot of
Alli takers will do that and wonder why they aren't losing weight,"
she wrote in an e-mail.
The early results are sketchy.
In the California beach town of Santa Monica, a Los Angeles Times
reporter found that Alli bottles were
flying off store shelves.
But in Philadelphia, once dubbed the nation's fattest city, Alli's
arrival appeared to be less of a sensation.
"We do have it in stock. No one has inquired about it,"
pharmacist Maria Taylor at Narberth Pharmacy, Montgomery County,
said last week, echoing several other local pharmacists. "Maybe
it should come with a coupon for Depends," the adult diaper.
Alli contains 60 milligrams of orlistat - half the amount found
in prescription Xenical. The over-the- counter version is taken
three times a day with meals and costs from $60 to $67 for a month's
supply. A year's worth costs at least $720.
The prescription drug's sales have been fading, from $135 million
in 2002 to $93 million last year.
Despite the fact that obesity rates are surging, an effective drug
remains elusive. "Eating is so fundamental for human existence
that the body has multiple redundant systems," said Gary D.
Foster, who directs Temple University's Center for Obesity Research
and Education and was a consultant to GlaxoSmithKline for its Alli
Web site. "So if you block one pathway, it's evolutionarily
smart to have a backup."
Alli works by blocking the digestive enzyme Lipase, which aids
in fat absorption. The firm estimates that Alli blocks about 25
percent of the fat that reaches the gut.
But too much fat can cause oily discharges. "You may recognize
it as something that looks like the oil on top of a pizza,"
an Alli brochure says cheerily.
That is what happened to Paula Miguel, 35, of Hopatcong, N.J. She
was one of 400 people picked by the drug firm to receive a six-month
supply of Alli for free.
She said it was hardest the first week to establish her routine
to walk more and eat better.
She felt a strong urge to go after downing some greasy crab cakes
at a friend's house. "When I went to the bathroom, it was orangy,
like an oil," she said.
But, she said, that happened only once since she began April 18.
Overall, she said, she has lost 23 pounds, falling to 170 pounds
on her 5-foot-3 frame. "It's not as bad as they say,"
said Miguel. "I eat better . . . I'm more active. For me, it
works fine."
The company said users could expect to lose an average of 10 pounds
in a year. But that's high, independent experts say. The more potent
prescription version helped participants lose an average of 6.3
pounds by the end of a year, according to researchers who analyzed
50 studies for a 2005 article in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
He called Alli "a real niche product" that causes modest
weight loss.
"No one is going to abuse it," he said. "They're
going to be very unhappy if they do."
source:http://www.philly.com/
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