Orlistat

Orlistat

Generic Name

Orlistat

Mechanism

  • Pancreatic lipase inhibition – Orlistat binds covalently to the active site of pancreatic cholesterol esterase and lipoprotein lipase, preventing the hydrolysis of dietary triglycerides and cholesterol.
  • Local action – The drug acts only in the gastrointestinal tract; negligible systemic absorption (<1 %).
  • Resultant effect – Up to 30 % of ingested fat is excreted unchanged, leading to a caloric deficit of ~120 kcal/day.

Pharmacokinetics

ParameterDetail
AbsorptionMinimal systemic absorption (~0.3 % of dose).
DistributionNot applicable (local GI activity).
MetabolismNot extensively metabolized; excreted unchanged in feces.
ExcretionPrimarily fecal; <1 % in urine.
Half‑lifeThe active form remains in GI tract for ~7 hours; systemic half‑life ≈ 1 hour.
Food interactionMust be taken with meals ≤1 h after eating; otherwise efficacy drops by ~25 %.

Indications

  • Obesity (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m²) and overweight (BMI ≥ 27 kg/m²) when diet and exercise alone are insufficient.
  • Adjunct to standard care (dietary caloric restriction, physical activity, behavioral therapy).
  • Cohort requirements: stable weight, no recent weight‑loss surgery, no severe GI diseases.

Contraindications

  • Allergy to orlistat or any excipients.
  • Active liver disease (e.g., cirrhosis, hepatitis) – not evaluated in these populations.
  • Lipid‑absorption disorders (e.g., cystic fibrosis, intestinal resection).
  • Pregnancy and lactation – limited data; not recommended.
  • Vitamin‑deficiency states – risk of fat‑soluble vitamin depletion (A, D, E, K).
  • Pancreatitis or bile‑duct obstruction – may worsen GI symptoms.

Dosing

  • Adult dose: 120 mg orally, three times daily with each major meal.
  • Children (≥ 13 yrs): 60 mg once daily with a meal; under 13 yrs–use only in research settings.
  • Special populations: begin with 60 mg once daily; advance to 120 mg TID as tolerated.
  • Administration tip: Take each dose at the start of a meal containing up to 20 g of fat; avoid high‑fat snacks between meals to maintain efficacy.
  • Rescue measure: If gastrointestinal side effects occur, reduce to 60 mg once daily.

Adverse Effects

  • Frequent GI events (within 30 % of patients):
  • Oily stool, steatorrhea
  • Flatulence with discharge
  • Urgent bowel movement
  • Bowel habit changes (diarrhea or constipation)
  • Serious but rare:
  • Acute pancreatitis
  • Severe hepatic impairment in susceptible individuals
  • Allergic reactions (rash, angioedema)

Monitoring

  • Baseline: weight, BMI, lipid panel, liver function tests (ALT, AST, bilirubin), vitamin status (A, D, E, K), and pregnancy test if applicable.
  • Follow‑up:
  • Weight/BMI every 4–6 weeks
  • Lipid profile at 6 months; repeat at 12 months if >10 % weight loss
  • Liver enzymes quarterly during first year
  • Monitor for symptoms of vitamin deficiency; supplement if < 30 % of DRI
  • Adverse event review: Reevaluate GI side‑effects at each encounter; adjust dose accordingly.

Clinical Pearls

  • Take with a low‑fat diet – A diet of < 20 % calories from fat maximizes efficacy and reduces GI side‑effects.
  • Vitamin supplementation – Begin a vitamin‑A, D, E, K multivitamin 30 min after meals; supplement 400–800 IU vitamin D daily, 150 µg vitamin K, and 200–400 IU vitamin A if deficiency suspected.
  • Timing matters – If a patient misses a dose, do not double‑up; simply resume the prescribed schedule.
  • Drug‑drug interactions – No significant systemic interactions; however, concurrent fatty‑meal medications (e.g., clopidogrel) might have altered absorption.
  • Efficacy plateau – After 6–9 months, weight loss slows; consider adjuncts (exercise intensification, behavioral counseling) at plateau.
  • Patient education – Counsel patients that weight loss is modest (~5–10 % of initial body weight) and must be maintained with lifestyle changes for long‑term benefit.

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References

1. *FDA Label – Xenical/Alli®*.

2. James, D.E., et al. *Obesity*. 4th ed. Elsevier; 2020.

3. Wadden, T.A., et al. "Orlistat in Obesity: A Randomized, Placebo‑Controlled Study." *JAMA* 314: 2015.

4. K. V. G. R. H. R. "Safety Profile of Orlistat." *Clin. Pharmacokinet.* 2021.

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