NEW YORK - A low dose of the 
diet drug orlistat, coupled with a reduced-calorie diet, leads to significant 
weight loss and improved lipid and blood pressure profiles and is well 
tolerated, according to results of three studies reported at the International 
Congress of Obesity in Sydney, Australia. 
In an interview with Reuters Health ahead of the meeting, lead investigator 
Dr. Vidhu Bansal of GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Healthcare told Reuters Health, 
these studies show that orlistat 60 milligrams "is an excellent candidate for 
over-the-counter (OTC) use for weight loss." 
Orlistat 60 milligrams, which will be marketed as Alli (pronounced AL-eye) is 
a low-dose version of GlaxoSmithKline's prescription drug Xenical (orlistat 120 
mg capsules). It is currently under review at the U.S. Food and Drug 
Administration. 
Orlistat blocks absorption of approximately 25 percent of fat consumed and 
would be indicated for use in people "18 years of age and older who are 
overweight and committed to losing weight and making the dietary changes that 
will be needed to be successful," Bansal told Reuters Health. 
The three studies reported at the meeting involved a total of 1,729 
overweight subjects who were placed on a reduced calorie diet (30 percent fat, 
20 percent protein, 50 percent carbohydrate) alone (the control arm) or in 
combination with 60 milligrams orlistat. 
At 6 months, almost 50 percent of orlistat-treated subjects had lost 5 
percent or more of their baseline body weight, compared with 26 percent of 
subjects following a reduced calorie diet alone. 
At 1 year, 45 percent of the orlistat group lost at least 5 percent of their 
body weight compared to 29 percent of the control arm. 
Orlistat users also showed decreases in total cholesterol, "bad" LDL 
cholesterol and blood pressure. 
"There was about a 6 percent reduction in LDL cholesterol with orlistat 
compared to a reduction of about 1.5 percent in the placebo group," Bansal said. 
"There was about a 4 percent decrease for systolic and diastolic blood 
pressure with orlistat, whereas in the placebo group the systolic blood pressure 
was reduced by about 1.5 percent and diastolic blood pressure rose slightly," 
she added. 
These data "provide the assurance" that low-dose orlistat does not increase 
cholesterol or blood pressure and "in fact provides an improvement in the lipid 
and blood pressure profile. 
The data also show that patients tolerate 60 mg orlistat better than 120 mg. 
"Only 3 percent of people stopped taking 60 mg orlistat because of a 
gastrointestinal treatment-related side effects compared with 5.4 percent in 
prior studies of people taking the 120 mg dose," Bansal said. GI effects are 
mostly loose, oily stools, and urgency, which subside with 
time.