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Most available weight-loss drugs are
"appetite-suppressant" medications. Appetite-suppressant
medications promote weight loss by decreasing appetite or increasing the
feeling of being full. These medications decrease appetite by increasing
serotonin or catecholamine--two brain chemicals that affect mood and
appetite.
In 1999, the drug orlistat was approved by the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) as an obesity treatment. Orlistat works by reducing
the body's ability to absorb dietary fat by about one third.
Most currently available weight-loss medications are approved by the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for short-term use, meaning a
few weeks or months. Sibutramine and orlistat are the only weight-loss
medications approved for longer-term use in significantly obese
patients, although the safety and effectiveness have not been
established for use beyond 1 year. (See table 1 for the generic and
trade names of prescription weight-loss medications.) While the FDA
regulates how a medication can be advertised or promoted by the
manufacturer, these regulations do not restrict a doctor's ability to
prescribe the medication for different conditions, in different doses,
or for different lengths of time. The practice of prescribing medication
for periods of time or for conditions not approved is known as
"off-label" use. While such use often occurs in the treatment
of many conditions, you should feel comfortable about asking your doctor
if he or she is using a medication or combination of medications in a
manner that is not approved by the FDA. The use of more than one
weight-loss medication at a time (combined drug treatment) is an example
of an off-label use. Using weight-loss medications other than
sibutramine or orlistat for more than a short period of time (i.e., more
than "a few weeks") is also considered off-label use.
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