EMEA recommends Acomplia must not be used in patients on antidepressants or with major depression


The EMEA ( European Medicines Agency ) has recommended contraindicating Acomplia ( Rimonabant ), in patients with ongoing major depression or who are being treated with antidepressants, because of the risk of psychiatric side effects.

Doctors in the EU ( European Union ) have already been warned about this since June 2006 but the Agency’s Committee for Medicinal Products for Human Use ( CHMP ) has now recommended upgrading this warning.

Acomplia has been authorised in the EU since June 2006 as an adjunct to diet and exercise for the treatment of obese or overweight adult patients. Psychiatric side effects, in particular depression, were identified as the main safety issue at the time of approval. They were reflected in the medicine’s product information as a warning that doctors should not prescribe Acomplia in patients with uncontrolled serious psychiatric conditions such as major depression.

As part of its continuous monitoring of the safety of medicines, the CHMP requested Sanofi-Aventis in June 2007 to submit all available information on the psychiatric side effects of Acomplia.

Finalising the assessment of the available data at its 16-19 July 2007 meeting, the CHMP concluded that the benefits of Acomplia continue to outweigh its risks, except in patients with ongoing major depression or taking antidepressants.

The CHMP also recommended adding a warning that treatment with Acomplia should be stopped if a patient develops depression, as well as the inclusion of additional information on the psychiatric safety of Acomplia.

Source: EMEA, 2007

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