Editor—In their drug point Persson et al report that hypertension occurred in a woman when she took orlistat.1-1 Further information indicates that the hypertensive events are not related to treatment with orlistat.
After finally stopping orlistat in August 1999 the patient was reported to have developed fever, headache, oedema, and joint pains in mid-November 1999. Diuretic treatment was restarted, and fever and oedema resolved; blood pressure was reported as normal during this period. In March 2000 the oedema and headache recurred and her blood pressure was 170/100 mm Hg; the patient had not taken diuretic treatment while on holiday for a week. Frusemide was resumed, and after a few days the oedema resolved and her blood pressure was 140/90 mm Hg. Information recently received indicates that investigations performed by a specialist internist concluded that the patient has idiopathic oedema.
Orlistat has been studied in over 20 000 patients, and since it was first launched in 1998 there have been more than 8.2 million patient treatments. It is well documented that weight loss due to diet alone is associated with a reduction in blood pressure. The Cochrane Collaboration recently completed a review indicating that a weight loss of 4-8% was associated with a decrease in blood pressure of about 3 mm Hg.1-2
In clinical studies, patients treated with orlistat lost significantly more weight than control patients (placebo plus diet)1-3,1-4 and thus showed correspondingly greater reductions in blood pressure than control patients. A meta-analysis of five randomised, double blind, placebo controlled studies (3132 patients) showed that patients who had raised diastolic blood pressure at baseline (⩾90 mm Hg) showed a 7.9 mm Hg reduction in diastolic blood pressure when treated with orlistat compared with a 5.5 mm Hg reduction in the control group.1-5
Finally, of the 1466 patients treated with placebo plus diet in the clinical trial database, 1.3% had hypertension of new onset or worsening hypertension and 0.1% had a hypertensive crisis. Of the 1913 patients treated with orlistat on that same database, 1.2% had new or worsening hypertension and none had a hypertensive crisis as an adverse event.
After a review of these and the cumulative data in the Roche safety database we have concluded that there is no evidence of a causal association between orlistat and hypertension. We trust that the information provided puts the drug point into perspective.
References
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1-3.Sjöström L, Rissanen A, Andersen T, Boldrin M, Golay A, Koppeschaar HP, et al. Randomised placebo-controlled trial of orlistat for weight loss and prevention of weight regain in obese patients. Lancet. 1998;352:167–172. doi: 10.1016/s0140-6736(97)11509-4. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
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