|
The world’s ‘Leakage’
Accidents may happen with a new OTC diet drug
By Raina Kelley
Glaxosmithkline has a tip for
people who decide to try Alli, the over-the-counter weight-loss
drug it is launching with a multimillion-dollar advertising
blitz-keep an extra pair of pants handy. That’s because Alli, a
lower-dose version of the prescription drug Xenical, could (cue
the late-night talkshow hosts) make you soil your pants. But while
Alli’s most troublesome side effect, anal leakage, is sure to be
good for a few laughs, millions of people who are desperate to
take off weight may still decide the threat of an accident is
worth it.
Unlike traditional diet pills,
Alli, the first over-the-counter weight-loss product approved by
the FDA, is not an appetite suppressant. Instead, it prevents the
gastrointestinal system from absorbing about 25 percent of the fat
a person WEIGH 114 consumes. If you eat more than the recommended
15 grams of fat at a meal, you may experience cramps and the
uncontrollable escape of those extra fat grams. For New Jersey
native Paula Miguel, 35, however, that’s just the incentive she
needed to stay on track and lose 20 pounds. “I see Alli as a
disciplinarian,” says Miguel. “It keeps me accountable for
everything I eat:’
While many nutritionists agree
that Alli can help block the absorption of fat calories, they are
careful to note that if people are not dedicated to changing their
eating habits, weight loss will be small or nonexistent, and the
side effects will eventually cause them to stop taking the drug.
“For some people who are extremely motivated and don’t mind a
little hit of leakage, this may work for them,” says Elisa Zied, a
nutritionist from New York City. Zied is quick to add that Alli
users should be sure to take a multivitamin every day, since the
drug also decreases the absorption of fat-soluble minerals and
vitamins such as E, A, D and K.
Critics say it’s the low-fat,
reduced calorie diet Alli users are encouraged to follow that
results in real weight loss. A new companion book, “The Alli Diet
Plan,” by Dr. Caroline Apovian, aims to maximize the drug’s
weight-loss potential with detailed meal plans and more than 200
low-fat recipes. But there’s not much in the book that can’t be
found in lots of other diet books that don’t endorse a particular
weight-loss product. Dr. Carla Wolper of the New York Obesity
Research Center says Alli offers dieters a slight edge, but
permanent change comes from a change in attitude and behavior.
GlaxoSmithKline says people who use Alli lose 50 percent more
weight than people who follow the same regimen but forgo the drug.
All joking aside, Alli, like Xenical, has been proved to be safer
than the OTC appetite suppressants, which can cause heart and
kidney damage and even seizures in some users.
The drug maker hopes to stem the
number of Alli dropouts by including with each $50 starter kit a
weightloss journal and a calorie and fat counter. In addition, the
company is sponsoring an online behavioral support program. Dr.
Vidhu Bansal, who led GIaxoSmithKline’s Alli clinical trials, says
that people who are looking for a quick fix shouldn’t bother
buying the drug: “People have to be committed to losing weight.
They have to accept that they have to make a lifestyle change to
get healthy.” More than 60 percent of Americans can he classified
as overweight or obese. With the economic impact of obesity in the
United States said to top $122 billion a year, commitment to a
healthy lifestyle seems to be one thing we don’t have. So perhaps
we need the threat of you know what.
With Jemimah Noonoo
|