Once-Heralded Obesity Research Called into Question

UC scientists might have dashed hopes for a new, natural weight-loss treatment reported recently by British researchers.

The UC Medical Center team says that repeated studies have failed to reproduce the findings, claimed in the British report, that the gastrointestinal hormone PYY3-36 decreases appetite and weight gain in rodents.

When the British scientists first published their report in the leading scientific journal Nature in August 2002, it generated excitement worldwide about the potential of PYY3-36 in treating obesity. Several companies moved to bring this natural treatment to market.

Now, in a rebuttal in Nature's "Brief Communications Arising" section (July 8, 2004), the Cincinnati scientists report that 42 investigators from 15 international institutions have been unable to reproduce the findings.

 

Matthias Tschoep, MD, of the Obesity Research Center at the UC Genome Research Institute, who led the latest research, says the original report by Dr. Rachel Batterham and her colleagues at Imperial College Faculty of Medicine, London, "was heralded as potentially offering a new therapy for obesity."

 

"Our original aim was to take Dr. Batterham's results and work to accelerate the process toward a new treatment option for obesity," said Dr. Tschoep.  "The results we generated were entirely unexpected.

"We have been unable to replicate these results. Although the reasons for this discrepancy remained undetermined, an effective anti-obesity drug ultimately must produce its effects across a range of situations."

The UC Medical Center team conclude: "To our knowledge, only one group not associated with the authors has so far replicated parts of the original study.  However, this group found no effect of PYY3-36 on body weight or on chronic food intake, and no effect on acute food intake without specific pre-fasting."

Dr. Tschoep said he and his colleagues don't exclude the possibility that some specific-but yet unknown-experimental conditions might be required to reproduce the appetite-inhibiting effect of PYY3-36.

However, he says, "We feel it's our  responsibility to share the results of our  numerous studies with patients and doctors fighting obesity, as well as with fellow scientists facing the difficult decision as to which molecular target they should invest their limited resources in, or which drug may justify expensive clinical trials."

UC co-authors include Randy Seeley, PhD, and Stephen Benoit, PhD, both of the Obesity Research Center at UC's Genome Research Institute.

A summary of the group's findings is published in the July 8 Nature, and full details are available online at

www.pyyobesity.com

.

Tags

Related Stories

1

Tips to avoid headaches this holiday season

December 15, 2025

A University of Cincinnati migraine expert offered a list of potential headache triggers around the holidays, and how you can try to avoid them, to 91.7 WVXU News. "There are a number of different factors that make this a very headache provocative time," said Vincent Martin, MD, professor of clinical medicine at the University of Cincinnati's College of Medicine and director of the Headache and Facial Pain Center at the Gardner Neuroscience Institute.

2

Local couple uses royalties from children's books to give gifts to kids in need

December 15, 2025

A local couple has found a unique way to give back to those in need this holiday season. Vic and Laura Troha wrote two children's books together, and this year, they are using the proceeds to buy Christmas gifts for Hamilton County foster kids. The couple are both graduates of the University of Cincinnati's College of Allied Health Sciences and met the day they graduated.

3

Make Hoxworth Blood Center’s special holiday events part of your family celebrations this December

December 12, 2025

This December, Hoxworth Blood Center, University of Cincinnati, is inviting families across Greater Cincinnati to add something truly meaningful to their holiday traditions: giving the gift of life. With festive community events, beloved local partners and special thank-you gifts for donors, Hoxworth is making it easier, and more heartwarming than ever, to roll up your sleeves and help save lives close to home.