Weight-loss drugs pilot to begin in UK amid uncertainty over Wegovy
launch
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[June 08, 2023]
By Ludwig Burger and Maggie Fick
(Reuters) - Britain plans to launch a pilot programme exploring how new
weekly weight-loss shots such as Novo Nordisk's Wegovy can be given to
obese patients by general practitioners even as the drug's market launch
remains unclear.
The government's announcement on the 40-million-pound ($50 million)
pilot programme comes after drug cost-effectiveness watchdog NICE in
March recommended the use of Wegovy in adults with at least one
weight-related condition and a body mass index of 35, but only within
the National Health Service's (NHS) specialist weight management scheme.
The timing of Wegovy's launch in Britain - which would be only the
fourth country to use it - is uncertain, however, after Novo last month
rationed starter doses to secure supply to U.S. patients already on the
regimen, after it was overwhelmed by demand there.
British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said on Wednesday the pilot and
fighting obesity-related diseases could reduce pressure on hospitals.
It would also support "people to live healthier and longer lives, and
helping to deliver on my priority to cut NHS waiting lists".
The NHS endured a tough winter in England in particular, with waiting
lists hitting record highs and staff striking for higher pay amid
double-digit inflation.
Obesity is one of the leading causes of severe health conditions such as
cardiovascular disease, diabetes and cancer, and costs the NHS 6.5
billion pounds a year.
The government said that NICE, short for the National Institute for
Health and Care Excellence, was also considering potential use of Eli
Lilly's Mounjaro, also known as tirzepatide, currently licensed to treat
diabetes but expected to win approval to treat obesity as well.
The two-year pilot will be launched after the new weight loss drugs are
available in the UK, it said.
DELAYS
Novo's inability to keep up with U.S. demand for Wegovy has effectively
delayed the launch in Britain and elsewhere in Europe. It has also had
to overcome production problems at a contract manufacturer.
A company spokesperson would not comment on any commitment to supply the
programme, but said there had been preliminary discussion on the role of
treating obesity as part of the UK government's ambition to bring people
back into the workforce.
Eli Lilly said that its Mounjaro drug could be part of the solution,
once approved.
The British government said that only 35,000 people would have access to
Wegovy under the specialist hospital services, but tens of thousands
more could be eligible.
Phil McEwan, CEO of health economics consultancy Heor Ltd in Cardiff,
who advises Novo on market access, said the need for specialist services
would have been a major bottleneck.
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A selection of injector pens for the
Wegovy weight loss drug are shown in this photo illustration in
Chicago, Illinois, U.S., March 31, 2023. REUTERS/Jim
Vondruska/Illustration
"You have to be referred to
specialist care and that’s not the easiest thing to do. The
challenge will be to access reimbursement," he said.
Keen interest in the treatment is already showing elsewhere. One of
Britain's largest pharmacy chains, Superdrug, said its remote
prescriptions service was anticipating significant demand.
"Superdrug Online Doctor has seen five time anticipated levels of
registration," a spokesperson told Reuters in April, declining to
give numbers.
Outside the U.S., Wegovy has only been launched in Denmark and
Norway but major medical insurance schemes there will not pay for
it, saying the health benefits would not justify the extra
budgeting.
Britain's move is likely to heat up a debate about whether a drug is
the right answer to the growing public health problem of obesity or
whether there are other ways to encourage healthier lifestyles.
Duane Mellor, a dietitian and senior lecturer at Aston University's
medical school, said drugs like Wegovy were a tool, not the
solution.
"It’s a political decision to say the government is doing something
to tackle health issues linked to obesity ... we need to be much
braver and bolder in looking at root causes around access to health
care and about making healthy food enjoyable."
Simon Cork, a senior lecturer in physiology at Anglia Ruskin
University, said obesity had been shown to be "incredibly difficult"
to manage through diet and exercise alone and that Wegovy and
similar drugs offered a step change.
"Hence the excitement from the general public and why the UK
government seems to be pushing to make the drug available widely,"
he said.
Wegovy works by mimicking a hormone called glucagon-like peptide-1
(GLP-1) that triggers the feeling of fullness in the body after
eating.
Trials showed it leads to an average weight loss of around 15%,
alongside changes to diet and exercise.
($1 = 0.8051 pounds)
(Reporting by Ludwig Burger in Frankfurt, Maggie Fick in London,
additional reporting by Anusha S in Bengaluru and Helen Reid and
Alistair Smout in London; editing by Lincoln Feast, Mark Potter and
Jane Merriman)
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