Tolerability and safety of the new anti-obesity medications.
Drug Saf · 2014
Last updated 2026-05-28Two newer anti-obesity drugs, phentermine/topiramate extended-release (PHEN/TPM ER) and lorcaserin, were approved in 2012 for long-term weight management. In studies, PHEN/TPM ER led to greater weight loss than lorcaserin, but lorcaserin had fewer side effects. Both drugs were generally well-tolerated, with side effects that were usually mild and decreased over time. PHEN/TPM ER may increase heart rate and cause birth defects, while lorcaserin may affect heart valves and blood sugar levels.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Drug Saf, 2014 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 13 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.42 |
| NIH percentile | 25 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Obesity |
Abstract
Worldwide obesity prevalence has nearly doubled since 1980. Due to numerous co-morbidities, obesity represents a serious health and socioeconomic problem worldwide. Pharmacotherapy should be an integral part of comprehensive obesity management. Drug therapy can assist in weight loss and its maintenance in those individuals who do not achieve appropriate weight loss through lifestyle interventions alone. After the withdrawal of sibutramine from the market in 2010, orlistat, a lipase inhibitor, was the only remaining prescription drug approved for the long-term treatment of obesity. In 2012, phentermine/topiramate extended-release (PHEN/TPM ER) combination and lorcaserin were approved by the US FDA as novel medications for long-term weight management. Three major phase III trials conducted with each drug confirmed their efficacy in terms of weight loss/maintenance and improvement of cardiometabolic risks. No head-to-head studies between the two new anti-obesity drugs have been carried out. However, in the existing studies PHEN/TPM ER had a superior weight loss profile to lorcaserin but the incidence of adverse effects was lower with lorcaserin. Both drugs were well-tolerated, and adverse events were modest in intensity, dose dependent, rather rare, and tended to decrease with the duration of treatment. Major safety concerns regarding PHEN/TPM ER include elevations in resting pulse rate, teratogenicity, mild metabolic acidosis, and psychiatric and cognitive adverse events. Valvulopathy, cognitive impairment, psychiatric disorders, and hypoglycemia represent major safety concerns for lorcaserin. Although existing trials have not demonstrated any significant issues with PHEN/TPM ER-induced heart rate elevation and lorcaserin-induced valvulopathy, all safety concerns should be seriously taken into account in patients treated with either of these novel anti-obesity medications.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 25096956 ↗