Background
We identified
anti-obesity medications withdrawn since 1950 because of adverse drug
reactions after regulatory approval, and examined the evidence used
to support such withdrawals, investigated the mechanisms of the
adverse reactions, and explored the trends over time.
Methods
We conducted
searches in PubMed, the World Health Organization database of drugs,
the websites of drug regulatory authorities, and selected full texts,
and we hand searched references in retrieved documents. We included
anti-obesity medications that were withdrawn between 1950 and
December 2015 and assessed the levels of evidence used for making
withdrawal decisions using the Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based
Medicine criteria.
Results
We identified 25
anti-obesity medications withdrawn between 1964 and 2009; 23 of these
were centrally acting, via monoamine neurotransmitters. Case reports
were cited as evidence for withdrawal in 80% of instances.
Psychiatric disturbances, cardiotoxicity (mainly attributable to
re-uptake inhibitors), and drug abuse or dependence (mainly
attributable to neurotransmitter releasing agents) together accounted
for 83% of withdrawals. Deaths were reportedly associated with seven
products (28%). In almost half of the cases, the withdrawals occurred
within 2 years of the first report of an adverse reaction.
Conclusions
Most of the drugs
that affect monoamine neurotransmitters licensed for the treatment of
obesity over the past 65 years have been withdrawn because of adverse
reactions. The reasons for withdrawal raise concerns about the wisdom
of using pharmacological agents that target monoamine
neurotransmitters in managing obesity. Greater transparency in the
assessment of harms from anti-obesity medications is therefore
warranted.
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