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AOD 9604

AOD-9604, Anti-Obesity Drug 9604, Tyr-hGH177-191

Quick Stats
Studies 15
Trials 0
Score 2
2012 pubmed 26 citations

Current updates in the medical management of obesity.

Khan. Areej A; Raza. Shahzad S; Khan. Yusra Y; Aksoy. Tulay T; Khan. Monis M; Weinberger. Yitzchak Y; Goldman. Joel J

Key Findings

  • Obesity treatment should aim to lower heart‑disease risk, not just weight.
  • Several anti‑obesity drugs are approved, and newer agents like AOD9604 are being explored for their ability to cut fat at the molecular level.
  • AOD9604 is mentioned as a potential therapy but the review does not provide specific dosing or efficacy data.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, the review confirms that AOD9604 is still experimental and not yet a standard, evidence‑based option. It suggests focusing on proven lifestyle changes and FDA‑approved medications while watching future research on peptides like AOD9604 for possible future protocols.

Summary

The article reviews the current medical options for treating obesity, highlighting that diet and lifestyle alone often give only modest weight loss. It lists FDA‑approved drugs and newer compounds, including the peptide AOD9604, that work by reducing appetite or altering how the body stores fat.

Abstract

Obesity is a chronic medical condition that is expected to become an indirect but leading cause of mortality and morbidity. Obesity results in type 2 diabetes mellitus, insulin resistance, hypertension, dyslipidemia, coronary heart disease. These factors contribute to cardiovascular disease that is a leading cause of death. Therefore, the approach to obesity therapy should be designed to reduce cardiovascular disease risk and mortality. Diet and lifestyle changes remain the cornerstones of therapy for obesity, but the resultant weight loss is often small. For more effective weight loss, individuals have shown to benefit from anti-obesity medications. Anti-Obesity therapy is considered for individuals with a body mass index greater than 30 kg/m2 or ranging from 25 to 30 kg/m2, or individuals with co-morbid conditions. Recent anti-obese medications affect biological mechanisms that suppress appetite and absorb nutrients to regulate body weight. In this review, we discuss the FDA approved anti-obesity drugs and recent patents which include phentermine/topiramate, pramlintide, lorcaserin, AOD9604, oleoyl-estrone, trk-beta antagonists and melanin concentrating hormone that can reduce adiposity at the molecular level.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2012

Date

2012-05-01T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.2174/187221412800604644

Citations

26

References

81