FDA Approved Weight Loss Pill Might Not Be Your Best "Alli"
When taken on a low fat diet, the pill prevents the body from absorbing fat. But in talking to the experts NewsChannel 11 learned if you continue to eat a high fat diet while on Alli, you could pay an uncomfortable price.
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2007/6/12
1st OTC diet pill with OK from FDA in stores Friday Diet pill with FDA backing due in stores this Friday
2007/5/25
EU regulators back Glaxo's OTC obesity treatment
The European Medicines Agency said on Friday its experts had recommended granting marketing authorisation for Glaxo's low-dose version of orlistat -- the active ingredient in Xenical -- based on the safety and efficacy of Roche's original product.
Glaxo's non-prescription drug was approved in February in the United States, where it is being launched under the brand name Alli.Source: http://investing.reuters.co.uk/
2007/5/18
New Diet Pill Coming Next Week
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2007/5/17
Diet Pill alli to Go on Sale from June 15th
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.Read the rest of this entry ... (4 words left)