Det Biovidenskabelige Fakultet - Københavns UniversitetKøbenhavns UniversitetFood of LIFE

Effect of tesofensine on bodyweight loss, body composition, and quality of life in obese patients: a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial

Af Arne Astrup, Sten Madsbad, Leif Breum, Thomas J Jensen, Jens Peter Kroustrup, Thomas Meinert Larsen

 

Summary

Background

Weight-loss drugs produce an additional mean weight loss of only 3–5 kg above that of diet and placebo over 6 months, and more effective pharmacotherapy of obesity is needed. We assessed the efficacy and safety of tesofensine—an inhibitor of the presynaptic uptake of noradrenaline, dopamine, and serotonin—in patients with obesity.

 

Methods

We undertook a phase II, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in five Danish obesity management centres. After a 2 week run-in phase, 203 obese patients (body-mass index 30–≤40 kg/m2) were prescribed an energy restricted diet and randomly assigned with a list of randomisation numbers to treatment with tesofensine 0.25 mg (n=52), 0.5 mg (n=50), or 1.0 mg (n=49), or placebo (n=52) once daily for 24 weeks. The primary outcome was percentage change in bodyweight. Analysis was by modified intention to treat (all randomised patients with measurement after at least one dose of study drug or placebo). The study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00394667.

 

Findings

161 (79%) participants completed the study. After 24 weeks, the mean weight loss produced by diet and placebo was 2.0% (SE 0.60). Tesofensine 0.25 mg, 0.5 mg, and 1.0 mg and diet induced a mean weight loss of 4.5% (0.87), 9.2% (0.91), and 10.6% (0.84), respectively, greater than diet and placebo (p<0.0001). The most common adverse events caused by tesofensine were dry mouth, nausea, constipation, hard stools, diarrhoea, and insomnia. After 24 weeks, tesofensine 0.25 mg and 0.5 mg showed no significant increases in systolic or diastolic blood pressure compared with placebo, whereas heart rate was increased by 7.4 beats per min in the tesofensine 0.5 mg group (p=0.0001).

 

Interpretation

Our results suggest that tesofensine 0.5 mg might have the potential to produce a weight loss twice that of currently approved drugs. However, these findings of efficacy and safety need confirmation in phase III trials.


Funding

Neurosearch A/S, Denmark.

 

Summary 

Introduction

Methods

Results

Discussion

References

Figures and tables

 

(Publiceret på foodoflife.dk og i Lancet)

Food of LIFE, - siden er sidst opdateret d.27. september 2010

Indhold

Publiceret i Lancet

Denne artikel er skrevet af danske forskere og læger og blev 23. oktober 2008 publiceret i det ansete lægevidenskabelige tidsskrift The Lancet.

 

Forskerne bag:

Department of Human Nutrition, Faculty of Life Sciences (Prof A Astrup MD, T M Larsen PhD) and Department of Endocrinology (Prof S Madsbad MD), University of Copenhagen, Denmark

Department of Medicine, Køge Hospital, Køge, Denmark (L Breum MD)

Cyncron Clinical Research Unit, Copenhagen, Denmark (T J Jensen MD)

Department of Endocrinology, Aalborg Hospital, Aalborg, Denmark (J P Kroustrup MD)


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