Blockbuster obesity drug aims to win $4bn sales

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Blockbuster obesity drug aims to win $4bn sales for Sanofi-Aventis
French pharmaceuticals group develops treatment for condition at the top of global health agenda

A new anti-obesity pill that market observers say could become the world's biggest-selling drug is close to getting approval from the European Commission.

The expected green light from Brussels in the next few weeks would mean that the French giant Sanofi-Aventis could begin marketing the treatment, called rimonabant but branded as Acomplia, later this summer. It is the first of a new generation of drugs set to hit the market in the next few years that could transform obesity, still a small market, into a gold mine for the pharmaceutical industry.

Pfizer, Bayer, Eli Lilly and Merck are developing treatments similar to Acomplia, though they are further behind. Sanofi plans to launch Acomplia fi
rst in the UK, Germany, Ireland and Scandinavia.

The timing is auspicious. Governments in Europe and the US have put obesity and its associated conditions, including Type 2 diabetes, at the top of their public health agendas. The Department of Health says that more than half of all British adults - 24 million people - are either overweight or obese. In America, obesity and its complications are estimated to cost the country $70bn (?37bn) annually, according to Scrip Reports.

Gbola Amusa, an analyst with research firm Sanford C Bernstein, said that Acomplia could achieve $4.1bn in annual sales by 2010, in part because it has been shown in clinical trials not only to trim fat but to increase levels of good cholesterol and control diabetes.

"In the blue sky scenario, this could become the world's best- selling drug as the indication is so broad," he said. "It has a path to revenues that we rarely ever see from a pharma product."

The treatment is the first in a new class of drugs call
ed canna- binoid CB-1 blockers, which suppress appetite by blocking the receptor in the brain responsible for hunger pangs, which can be stimulated by marijuana.

The Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use (CMPH), an advisory group to the European medical regulator EMEA, recommended on 28 April that Acomplia be approved for obese patients, as well as for overweight people with Type 2 diabetes or dyslipidemia, both of which are conditions that governments usually fund. The EC follows CMPH recommendations in nearly all cases.

"We are 99.9 per cent sure of approval," a Sanofi spokesman said.

Only two prescription weight-loss drugs are on the market, and neither has had much success. Abbott's Meridia is an appetite suppressant that produces an artificial sense of being sated, but it also causes hypertension. Roche's Xenical works by blocking the body's ability to absorb fat. However, any fat ingested must be passed out of the body through the bowels, which many patients find uncomfo
rtable.

Neither can be prescribed for any indications beyond weight loss. "It's not being obese that kills you, it's the side-effects that come along with it," said Dr Julian Mercer of the Rowett Institute. "Addressing associated risk factors is a novel aspect."

Approval in America, the world's biggest drugs market, is crucial. The US industry regulator gave an "approvable letter" for Acomplia in February, asking for more time and information before it gave its final decision. Sanofi's head of research and development, G?rard Le Fur, said at the company's annual general meeting in Paris last week that he expects to get US approval by the end of the year.

The indications for which it is approved are also important. Neither Orlistat nor Meridia qualify for reimbursement with US insurers. If the label includes Type 2 diabetes and dyslipidemia, as is expected for Europe, the chances that insurers will pay for it are much greater.

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Ice Cream Man Shot, Robbed

Ice Cream Man Shot, Robbed

Victim Shot Behind Left Ear

POSTED: 6:53 am CDT June 5, 2006
UPDATED: 9:38 am CDT June 5, 2006

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SAN ANTONIO -- A 26-year-old ice cream vendor was shot and injured while on his route in a West Side neighborhood Sunday night, authorities said.

Police said Martin Gaytan was shot behind his left ear shortly before 6 p.m. near the intersection of Chipinque and Cordova.

Gaytan was transported to a local hospital with what police described as non-life-threatening injuries.

Police said they were questioning a man who they believe was involved in the shooting.

Sgt. Lawrence Walters, a spokesman for the San Antonio Police Department, said witnesses told police they saw the man who shot Gaytan first buy ice cream from him.

"Then he shot the victim in the back of
the neck behind the left ear and took an unknown amount of money," said Walters.

A short time later, police arrested a man who matched the description of the alleged shooter at the Las Palmas Shopping Center.

Gaytan's wife, Mary Cervantes, said her husband had mentioned that some "guys" had been following him and calling him names recently as he made his rounds.

"He said, 'I just go as fast as I can so I can pass them by, because I don?t want any trouble,'" said Cervantes.

Cervantes said her husband is a hardworking man who never bothered anyone.

"He didn't deserve that. He was just trying to make a living," said Cervantes. "He's a good person -- a working person. He just goes to work, comes home and that's it."

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