PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Obesity experts spotlight safety gap in clinical trials and drug labeling for people with obesity

A new publication calls for safe and effective drug dosing and better labeling

2023-09-05
(Press-News.org) A new opinion piece published in Health Affairs Forefront raises questions around current approaches to assess drug safety and effectiveness in people with obesity. The article sheds light on how increased body fat can modify the effects of drugs used to treat common conditions, in some cases rendering the drugs ineffective or unsafe for people with obesity.

The article, titled “Assessments Of Drug Safety And Effectiveness Continue To Fail People With Obesity,” argues that drug manufacturers should be required to show correct dosing instructions on their labels for people with obesity when they are well-known and, when appropriate, include people with obesity in clinical trials during the drug approval process.

“People with obesity deserve to know that the prescription drugs they take are safe and effective for them,” according to William Dietz, Director of the STOP Obesity Alliance at The George Washington University, and one of the paper’s authors. “Today, neither patients nor their providers know how some drugs may act differently in people with obesity.”

According to the article, the FDA has recognized that people with obesity are often intentionally excluded from clinical trials in an effort to reduce the observed variability of early-phase trials. For some drugs, this makes little or no clinical difference. But with drugs that are lipophilic, meaning highly fat soluble, the difference in clinical impact for patients with obesity can be serious or even fatal.

For example, brexpiprazole, marketed under the brand name Rexulti, is a drug that treats schizophrenia and depression, two very serious conditions with life-threatening implications. Rexulti is lipophilic. It was approved by the FDA in 2015 without being tested fully on people with obesity, despite the fact that around 60% of people with schizophrenia have obesity. A 2021 study conducted by former senior FDA officials, as well as researchers at Tufts and Emerald Lake Safety, showed that Rexulti took substantially longer to reach effective levels in people with obesity –and in some patients may never reach effective levels. Yet the label provides no specific instructions or warning for patients or their providers regarding how to treat people with obesity.

This lack of information may have serious consequences. For example, people with schizophrenia who are under-treated or who stop treatment may suffer mental health crises or harm themselves or others.

As another example, posaconazole, marketed under the brand name Noxafil, is a drug that treats fungal infections such as candidiasis, which is reported to be more frequent in people with obesity. Researchers at Tufts and Emerald Lake Safety showed that the half-life of posaconazole is significantly longer in people with obesity. This results in prolonged inhibition of a key drug metabolizing enzyme and puts people with obesity at risk of dangerous drug-drug interactions for weeks after they stop taking posaconazole. There is no information on the Noxafil label to address these findings, despite its known risks.

“These data are part of the growing body of literature demonstrating that obesity can change the pharmacokinetics of some drugs, including changes in metabolism, clearance, volume of distribution, and half-life,” stated Christina Chow, Head of Research at Emerald Lake Safety and co-author. “Studies must be done in people with obesity to assess the drugs’ clinical impact before they are on the market, and labels must reflect this information. Unfortunately, the effects of obesity on the pharmacokinetics of many commonly prescribed drugs are still unknown.”

The authors recommend a three-pronged approach to address the gap:

First, the FDA should revise its Clinical Trials Guidance Documents and Regulations Relating to Good Clinical Practice to require testing on people with obesity. Second, whenever appropriate, drug manufacturers should include information on the effects of obesity on specific drugs in the drug package insert. Third, a reporting system for adverse events relating to drug metabolism in people with obesity should be established to enable the FDA and drug manufacturers to identify and track issues. “Regulators and policy makers can and should act now to address this gap, reduce risks to patients with obesity, and improve health,” says co-author David J. Greenblatt, Louis Lasagna Endowed Professor of Immunology at Tufts University.

STOP Obesity Alliance comprises a diverse group of business, consumer, government, advocacy, and health organizations dedicated to reversing the obesity epidemic in the United States. Emerald Lake Safety conducts independent research to make pharmaceuticals safer.

 

Link to article: https://www.healthaffairs.org/content/forefront/assessments-drug-safety-and-effectiveness-continue-fail-people-obesity

DOI: 10.1377/forefront.20230829.36462

 

Media Contacts:

Kelly Whittier, kwhittier@gwu.edu, 202-604-9893

Rachel Larris, rlarris@gwu.edu

END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Florida Museum researcher advances to finals in multimillion-dollar biodiversity competition

Florida Museum researcher advances to finals in multimillion-dollar biodiversity competition
2023-09-05
Over the course of four weeks this summer, a motley crew of biologists, engineers, entrepreneurs and programmers gathered at predetermined sites within Windsor Nature Park, a 185-acre tropical rainforest located in the heart of Singapore. They’d traveled from all over the world to participate in a one-of-a-kind competition hosted by the XPRIZE Foundation, in which 13 teams would have three days to identify as many organisms within the forest as possible. Up to 10 winning teams would equally split $2 million and advance to the 2024 finals, where they’d vie for the first-place prize of $5 million. But there was a catch: All observations and data collection ...

The first book to combine mineral nutrition and plant disease gets updated

The first book to combine mineral nutrition and plant disease gets updated
2023-09-05
Approximately 95% of the world’s food supply is directly or indirectly produced on soil, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations. Soil health is therefore critical to the health of all living organisms—especially plants. Equally as critical, resources that consider the overlap between soil’s mineral nutrition and plant diseases have been scarce, until members of the American Phytopathological Society (APS) recognized this gap. APS PRESS has newly published an updated edition of the first book to successfully combine the two important plant science disciplines of nutrition and pathology. Mineral Nutrition and Plant Disease, ...

IKIDS child health research gets another boost in funding

IKIDS child health research gets another boost in funding
2023-09-05
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — Seven years after an initial $17.9 million award from the National Institutes of Health, the Illinois Kids Development Study at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign will receive approximately $13.7 million – awarded in two phases – to continue its work for another seven years. The money coming to Illinois is part of a national collaborative effort to explore how environmental exposures influence child development, cognition, growth and health. IKIDS is part of Environmental Influences on Child Health Outcomes, a national initiative to study five ...

Does a “surprise” factor in gift-giving affect beneficiaries’ gratitude? Scientists answer

Does a “surprise” factor in gift-giving affect beneficiaries’ gratitude? Scientists answer
2023-09-05
Gratitude is a strong emotion, usually felt by a person who benefits from an intentional good deed of another person. Receiving gifts or benefits can instill a feeling of gratitude in people who receive them, i.e., beneficiaries, encouraging them to be more prosocial, while also helping to create a bond with their benefactors. This has led several researchers to examine the determinants of gratitude. Interestingly, beneficiaries often have preconceived beliefs about receiving a benefit. For instance, they may have no prior expectations of receiving a ...

Clarissa Campbell and Barbara Maier at CeMM receive ERC Starting Grants

Clarissa Campbell and  Barbara Maier at CeMM  receive ERC Starting Grants
2023-09-05
Two scientists at the CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine of the Austrian Academy of Sciences have received prestigious ERC Starting Grants from the European Commission: Clarissa Campbell and Barbara Maier. In Clarissa Campbell's laboratory, researchers are working to better understand the interplay between the immune system and metabolism. Barbara Maier and her team are researching the role of lymph nodes in the context of cancer. (Vienna, 5 September 2023) The ERC grants are among the most prestigious and competitive research grants offered ...

Faster postal service linked to better voter turnout

2023-09-05
PULLMAN, Wash. – A more efficient U.S. Postal Service can increase voter turnout in all states regardless of their mail voting laws, according to a Washington State University study. WSU researcher Michael Ritter analyzed election data from 2012 through 2020, when the pandemic encouraged many more people than usual to vote by mail. He found that in general more accessible mail voting laws, such as universal mail-in voting and no-excuse mail voting, increased the probability that individuals would vote. Restrictive laws, such as requiring ...

Scientists synthesize new organometallic “sandwich” compound capable of holding more electrons

Scientists synthesize new organometallic “sandwich” compound capable of holding more electrons
2023-09-05
Organometallic compounds, molecules made up of metal atoms and organic molecules, are often used to accelerate chemical reactions and have played a significant role in advancing the field of chemistry.  Metallocenes, a type of organometallic compound, are known for their versatility and special "sandwich" structure. Their discovery was a significant contribution to the field of organometallic chemistry and led to the awarding of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1973 to the scientists who discovered and explained their sandwich structure.  The ...

Study confirms it: Opposites don't actually attract

2023-09-05
Opposites don’t actually attract. That’s the takeaway from a sweeping CU Boulder analysis of more than 130 traits and including millions of couples over more than a century. “Our findings demonstrate that birds of a feather are indeed more likely to flock together,” said first author Tanya Horwitz, a doctoral candidate in the Department of Psychology and Neuroscience and the Institute for Behavioral Genetics (IBG). The study, published Aug. 31 in the journal Nature Human Behaviour, confirms what individual studies have hinted at for decades, defying the age-old adage that “opposites ...

Poor water quality disproportionately affects socially vulnerable communities

Poor water quality disproportionately affects socially vulnerable communities
2023-09-05
A new study published in IOP Publishing’s journal Environmental Research Letters examines the links between drinking water quality violations and social vulnerability in the United States, revealing that these violations disproportionately affect the most vulnerable communities. Approximately 70% of the population affected ranked in the highest social vulnerability category, with many different social parameters, beyond income, linked to different drinking water quality violations.  The study, led by researchers from the Jackson School of Geosciences, University of Texas in Austin, used new water quality data ...

Impact of COVID-19 pandemic on emergency department use in British Columbia

2023-09-05
A new study showing the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic and mitigation strategies used to manage the virus on emergency department (ED) visits in British Columbia can help with future planning. The study is published in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal) https://www.cmaj.ca/lookup/doi/10.1503/cmaj.221516. "Evaluation of the effects of the pandemic and associated measures can provide a historical account and inform health care service planning for both postpandemic recovery and mitigation of potential consequences ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Study shows psychedelic drug psilocybin gives comparable long-term antidepressant effects to standard antidepressants, but may offer additional benefits

Study finds symptoms of depression during pregnancy linked to specific brain activity: scientists hope to develop test for “baby blues” risk

Sexual health symptoms may correlate with poor adherence to adjuvant endocrine therapy in Black women with breast cancer

Black patients with triple-negative breast cancer may be less likely to receive immunotherapy than white patients

Affordable care act may increase access to colon cancer care for underserved groups

UK study shows there is less stigma against LGBTQ people than you might think, but people with mental health problems continue to experience higher levels of stigma

Bringing lost proteins back home

Better than blood tests? Nanoparticle potential found for assessing kidneys

Texas A&M and partner USAging awarded 2024 Immunization Neighborhood Champion Award

UTEP establishes collaboration with DoD, NSA to help enhance U.S. semiconductor workforce

Study finds family members are most common perpetrators of infant and child homicides in the U.S.

Researchers secure funds to create a digital mental health tool for Spanish-speaking Latino families

UAB startup Endomimetics receives $2.8 million Small Business Innovation Research grant

Scientists turn to human skeletons to explore origins of horseback riding

UCF receives prestigious Keck Foundation Award to advance spintronics technology

Cleveland Clinic study shows bariatric surgery outperforms GLP-1 diabetes drugs for kidney protection

Study reveals large ocean heat storage efficiency during the last deglaciation

Fever drives enhanced activity, mitochondrial damage in immune cells

A two-dose schedule could make HIV vaccines more effective

Wastewater monitoring can detect foodborne illness, researchers find

Kowalski, Salonvaara receive ASHRAE Distinguished Service Awards

SkAI launched to further explore universe

SLU researchers identify sex-based differences in immune responses against tumors

Evolved in the lab, found in nature: uncovering hidden pH sensing abilities

Unlocking the potential of patient-derived organoids for personalized sarcoma treatment

New drug molecule could lead to new treatments for Parkinson’s disease in younger patients

Deforestation in the Amazon is driven more by domestic demand than by the export market

Demand-side actions could help construction sector deliver on net-zero targets

Research team discovers molecular mechanism for a bacterial infection

What role does a tailwind play in cycling’s ‘Everesting’?

[Press-News.org] Obesity experts spotlight safety gap in clinical trials and drug labeling for people with obesity
A new publication calls for safe and effective drug dosing and better labeling