Fen-Phen: The truth about the diet pill and appetitie suppre
Con: Like all appetite suppressants, fen-phen
has significant side effects, namely high blood pressure in the lungs,
pulmonary hypertension and valvcular heart disease. It focuses on short-term
weight-loss, without focusing on healthy, balanced nutrition and exercise.
It has been removed from the market by the FDA. The following is the
FDA announcement:
FDA ANNOUNCES WITHDRAWAL OF FENFLURAMINE AND DEXFENFLURAMINE
The Food and Drug Administration, acting on new evidence
about significant side-effects associated with fenfluramine and dexfenfluramine,
has asked the manufacturers to voluntarily withdraw both treatments
for obesity from the market. Dexfenfluramine is manufactured for Interneuron
Pharmaceuticals and marketed under the name of Redux by Wyeth-Ayerst
Laboratories, a subsidiary of American Home Products Corp. of Madison,
N.J., which also manufactures and markets fenfluramine under the brand
name Pondimin. Both companies have agreed to voluntarily withdraw their
drugs. The FDA is not requesting the withdrawal of phentermine, the
third widely used medication for obesity.
The action is based on new findings from doctors who
have evaluated patients taking these two drugs with echocardiograms,
a special procedure that can test the functioning of heart valves. These
findings indicate that approximately 30 percent of patients who were
evaluated had abnormal echocardiograms, even though they had no symptoms.
This is a much higher than expected percentage of abnormal test results.
These findings call for prompt action, said
Michael A. Friedman, M.D., the Lead Deputy Commissioner of the FDA.
The data we have obtained indicate that fenfluramine, and the
chemically closely related dexfenfluramine, present an unacceptable
risk at this time to patients who take them.
FDA recommends that patients using either of these products
stop taking them. Users of these two products should contact their doctors
to discuss their treatment.
These new findings suggest fenfluramine and dexfenfluramine
are the likely cause of heart valve problems of the type that prompted
FDAs two earlier warnings concerning fen-phen, a combination
of fenfluramine and phentermine. Fen-phen has been widely
used off-label in recent years for the long-term management of obesity.
In July, researchers at the Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation
reported 24 cases of rare valvular disease in women who took the fen-phen
combination therapy. FDA alerted medical doctors that it had received
nine additional reports of the same type, and requested all health care
professionals to report any such cases to the agencys MedWatch
program (1-800-FDA-1088/fax 1-800-FDA- 0178) or to the respective pharmaceutical
manufacturers.
Subsequently, FDA received 66 additional reports of
heart valve disease associated mainly with fen-phen. There
were also reports of cases seen in patients taking only fenfluramine
or dexfenfluramine. FDA requested that the manufacturers of fenfluramine
and dexfenfluramine stress the potential risk to the heart in the drugs
labeling and patient package inserts. FDA continues to receive reports
of cardiac valvular disease in persons who have taken these drugs.
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