[Obesity: a review of currently used antiobesity drugs and new compounds in clinical development].
Zieba. Remigiusz R
Key Findings
- AOD9604 is listed as a human growth hormone fragment under clinical development for obesity.
- The review provides no efficacy, safety, or dosing details for AOD9604.
- Most current anti‑obesity drugs have modest weight loss effects and notable side‑effects, highlighting the need for better options.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers, the main takeaway is that AOD9604 is still experimental and not ready for self‑administration. There are no actionable dosing guidelines or proven benefits, so it should be considered a future research target rather than a current protocol.
Summary
The paper is a broad review of weight‑loss drugs and mentions AOD9604, a fragment of human growth hormone, as one of the experimental compounds being studied for obesity, but it gives no data on how well it works, how to dose it, or any safety information.
Abstract
This review summarizes data on currently used antiobesity drugs and new compounds under clinical development. Three antiobesity drugs are currently accepted for long-term use. Sibutramine is a noradrenaline and serotonin reuptake inhibitor which reduces body weight by about 4-5 kg but increases heart rate and arterial blood pressure. Orlistat is a gastrointestinal lipase inhibitor which results in mean weight loss by about 3 kg and reduces the incidence of type 2 diabetes in patients with impaired glucose tolerance; however, adverse gastrointestinal effects have been observed. Rimonabant is an endocannabinoid CB1 receptor antagonist which induces a 4-5 kg mean weight loss and improves glycemic and lipid profiles, but it induces anxiety and depressive disorders. Unfortunately, there are no data on the chronic administration of these drugs. Other drugs can induce weight loss, e.g. some antidepressants, antiseizure agents, and antidiabetic drugs. The moderate efficacy of currently used antiobesity drugs has led to an intense effort to identify new, safe antiobesity drugs with better therapeutic profiles. The new antiobesity drugs under clinical development include: 1) agents that affect neurotransmitters in the central nervous system, including noradrenaline and dopamine reuptake inhibitors (bupropion, radafaxine), selective 5HT2C receptor agonists (lorcaserin), and selective 5HT6 receptor antagonists, 2) agents that modulate the activity of neuropeptides influencing food intake, including leptin analogues, human ciliary neurotrophic factor (Axokine), neuropeptide Y antagonists, and melanine-concentrating hormone antagonists, 3) agents that affect the peripheral satiety signals and brain-gut axis, e.g. selective cholecystokinin receptor A agonists, PYY3-36, agents decreasing ghrelin activity, 4) thermogenic agents, e.g. selective beta3 receptor agonists and selective thyroid hormone receptor beta agonists, and 5) others, e.g. human growth hormone fragment (AOD9604) and gastrointestinal lipase inhibitor (cetilistat).
Study Information
pubmed
2007
2007-10-19T00:00:00.000Z