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2007/7/27

Diet Drug Acomplia Sales Dwarfed by Initial Sales of Diet Pill alli

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@ 09:21 PM (12 months, 3 days ago)

Just how badly sales of diet drug Acomplia (rimonabant) have been set back by Sanofi's inability to bring it to the U.S. market was dramatically illustrated July 25th when GlaxoSmithKline revealed initial launch results for over-the-counter diet pill alli (low-dose Xenical).

Sales of non-prescription alli totaled a surprising $156 million in the weeks after its U.S. launch in mid-June -- a sales surge that dwarfs the monthly sales of Acomplia in all the countries where it is on the market in the European Union.

If most of the alli sales were to people initially buying a one-month supply of the over-the-counter diet pill, the sales figure would suggest that more than 1 million Americans decided to try the first FDA-approved non-prescription weight-loss product in its first weeks on the market.

By contrast, in the European Union, where Acomplia was approved for sale last summer, somewhere between 100,000 and 200,000 are believed to have tried it over the course of a year.

Sanofi had initially hoped that Acomplia -- which was to be sold in the United States as Zimulti -- would be a blockbuster drug with sales that could even exceed $5 billion worldwide.

But without the U.S. market, it appears that Sanofi will be fortunate if sales in Europe and other countries where it has been approved total one-tenth of that.

Glaxo, in announcing sales results for alli as part of its report on second-quarter earnings, said its big advertising and promotion campaign paid off with more than 2.4 billion media mentions since the FDA approved sale of the diet pill in February.

Glaxo also said that it had recorded more than 4.5 million visits to its website -- myalli.com -- making it the third-most visited website for any over-the-counter pharmaceutical product.

Acomplia is currently marketed in 13 European Union nations as well as in Argentina, Mexico and a handful of other countries.

Source: http://www.acompliareport.com/

2007/7/15

Safety of new weight-loss drug is questioned

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@ 10:56 PM (12 months, 15 days ago)
A new over-the-counter weight-loss drug called Alli may give people with eating disorders another tool to harm themselves, local therapists fear.

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2007/5/17

Diet Pill alli (Low-Dose Xenical) to Go on Sale June 15th

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@ 08:06 PM (14 months, 14 days ago)

Diet pill alli (low-dose orlistat) will officially go on sale on June 15th, according to distributor GlaxoSmithKline Consumer Healthcare.

While the pricing of the drug has not been officially announced, a starter pack that includes 60 alli capsules (enough for three weeks assuming that you take one before each meal), the alli Shuttle (a carrying case for your pills), and several booklets including a calorie and fat counter and a daily journal is expected to cost between $50 and $60.

An alli starter pack that includes 90 alli capsules (enough for a month assuming that you take one before each meal) is expected to cost between $65 and $70.

An alli refill package -- consisting solely of 120 alli capsules (enough for 40 days) -- is expected to cost between $75 and $85.

Glaxo, meanwhile, has released the first two television commercials of what is ultimately expected to be a $100 million plus first-year blitz for the first FDA-approved over-the-counter diet drug.

Both of the first two commercials can be viewed by those who have missed them on television via the video sharing website YouTube.

As part of the prelaunch educational campaign for the diet pill that Glaxo agreed to at the insistence of the FDA, the first two commercials are very slick but soft-sell and are designed to push people to Glaxo's internet website, myalli.com, which is expected to play a major role in the company's marketing.

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2007/5/2

The Skinny on Alli

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@ 01:58 AM (15 months, 2 hours ago)

Could the first FDA-approved, over-the-counter diet pill jump start weight loss for overweight Americans?

For years, dieters across the nation have turned to drugstore aisles in search of a quick fix for their weight problems. Hundreds of bottles of supplements and diet pills line these aisles, and most use catchy advertisements and testimonials to make what many doctors say are unsubstantiated claims -- fooling dieters into believing that a bottle of pills could help them lose 10 or 20 pounds in a matter of days or weeks.

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