(HealthDay News) -- The U.S. Food and Drug Administration
has given its approval to Vyleesi, the second medication so far approved to help
women with low sexual desire.
In a news release, the FDA said that Vyleesi (bremelanotide)
is a drug that would be administered by injection prior to having sex.
It's been specifically approved for premenopausal women with
a condition known as acquired, generalized hypoactive sexual desire disorder
(HSDD).
"There are women who, for no known reason, have reduced
sexual desire that causes marked distress, and who can benefit from safe and
effective pharmacologic treatment," said Dr. Hylton Joffe, who directs the
FDA's Center for Drug Evaluation and Research's Division of Bone, Reproductive
and Urologic Products.
"Today's approval provides women with another treatment
option for this condition," Hylton said in the news release.
According to the agency, HSDD is not caused by any medical
or psychiatric condition, relationship issues or drug side effects.
Instead, women with HSDD have "previously experienced
no problems with sexual desire," the FDA said. "Generalized HSDD
refers to HSDD that occurs regardless of the type of sexual activity, situation
or partner."
The exact way in which Vyleesi helps stimulate sexual desire
remains unclear, but it works on melanocortin receptors on cells, the FDA said.
The drug is injected under the skin of the abdomen or thigh
at least 45 minutes prior to a sexual encounter, although the best timeframe
for dosing could vary from user to user.
Side effects can occur, the FDA added, and include nausea
and vomiting, flushing, injection site reactions and headache. Nausea was
especially common, affecting 40% of users in the clinical study that led to
approval.
That study involved 1,247 premenopausal women with HSDD who
received Vyleesi or a placebo in one of two 24-week trials.
"In these trials, about 25% of patients treated with
Vyleesi had an increase of 1.2 or more in their sexual desire score (scored on
a range of 1.2 to 6.0, with higher scores indicating greater sexual desire)
compared to about 17% of those who took placebo," the FDA noted.
Still, the overall benefit was not large. "There was no
difference between treatment groups in the change from the start of the study
to end of the study in the number of satisfying sexual events. Vyleesi does not
enhance sexual performance," the FDA said.
And there was one other caveat: Vyleesi can hike blood
pressure, so people with heart disease or high blood pressure should not take
it, the FDA said.
Vyleesi should also not be taken by anyone who is also
taking the drug naltrexone, used to combat opioid dependency, because Vyleesi
reduces naltrexone's effectiveness.
Vyleesi is not the first drug approved to enhance flagging
libido in women. In 2015 the FDA approved Addyi (flibanserin) for the purpose,
but the drug did not become widely used because it cannot be taken with alcohol
and only certain certified health care providers are allowed to prescribe it.
According to CNN, Vyleesi's maker, AMAG Pharmaceuticals,
said the new drug will not be available until September, and pricing and
reimbursement have yet to be determined.
One expert in female sexual health said it remains to be
seen how widely Vyleesi will be used.
"Female sexual dysfunction is more complicated in some
ways than male sexual dysfunction, so it's more difficult to treat," Dr.
Nicole Cirino, co-director of the Menopause and Sexual Therapy Clinic at Oregon
Health and Science University's Center for Women's Health, told CNN. She had no
role in Vyleesi's development.
Cirini suspects Vyleesi probably will not be the first
option women with HSDD turn to, but it might prove a useful adjunct to standard
psychotherapy and Addyi.
Vyleesi, like Addyi, probably won't be overprescribed,
Cirino added. When Addyi was introduced, there were concerns "that doctors
would just be prescribing this medication to anybody that came in saying that
they were having an issue with their libido," she said. "And I think
we have to give physicians more credit than that. In fact, that didn't happen
at all."
Still, Vyleesi could help some women, Cirino said.
"There's so many chemical factors that influence our
libido," she told CNN. "So you can't discount using a chemical
treatment as part of the broad approach to low libido."
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