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Study Medication Proves Promising for Hypothalamic Obesity

June 20, 2024 – Research from the Norcliffe Foundation Center for Integrative Brain Research’s Dr. Christian Roth and colleagues testing the medication setmelanotide in a first-of-its-kind multicenter clinical trial showed significant reductions in weight and hunger in patients with hypothalamic obesity, long considered resistant to treatment. The findings were recently published in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology.

Hypothalamic obesity is a rare form of severe obesity that most commonly occurs after surgery or radiation to tumors affecting the hypothalamus part of the brain. The hypothalamus regulates the balance between consuming and burning calories; damage to this area affects people in different ways. Symptoms of hypothalamic obesity include uncontrollable hunger, rapid weight gain even when restricting calories and slow metabolism, which makes physical activity more difficult. The disorder affects multiple regulatory pathways of energy intake and expenditure in the brain as well as the regulation of the nervous system and hormones. Many patients undergo traditional obesity management strategies, including lifestyle and behavioral interventions, pharmaceutical approaches approved for general obesity and bariatric surgery, with little benefit.

Feet on scale with measuring tape

Currently, there are no FDA-approved treatments specifically for hypothalamic obesity, highlighting a substantial unmet need. The medication setmelanotide targets the hypothalamic melanocortin-4 receptor pathway to control hunger and food intake. It is already approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the European Medicines Agency for rare conditions of obesity associated with monogenic mutations in the leptin–melanocortin pathway.

In this phase 2, open-label study conducted at five U.S. sites (including Seattle Children’s), Roth and colleagues investigated the effects of setmelanotide treatment for 16 weeks in 18 patients with hypothalamic obesity, ranging in age from 6 to 40 years. Promisingly, 89% of study participants experienced at least a 5% reduction in body mass index (BMI), with an average decrease in BMI of 15%, and no major safety issues, with only mild side effects observed. Additionally, patients older than 12 years showed an average of 45% reduction in hunger.

Fourteen of the 16 study participants reaching at least 5% weight loss in this pilot study were included in a long-term extension study still in progress. It has already shown setmelanotide caused 26% weight loss from baseline in patients completing a 12-month follow-up.

“The strong responsiveness might indicate a new drug mechanism by supplementing a deficient neuropeptide,” said Roth, a pediatric endocrinologist and a principal investigator at Seattle Children’s Research Institute, as well as a professor in the Division of Endocrinology, UW Medicine Department of Pediatrics. “Considering that weight gain is frequently intractable in patients with hypothalamic obesity, these findings hold promise for the development of effective and well tolerated treatments for the management of this complex condition.”

A larger, double-blind phase 3 clinical trial — an international study testing setmelanotide and a placebo in 120 patients with hypothalamic obesity — is underway.

The study was funded by Rhythm Pharmaceuticals.

— Colleen Steelquist