EDITORIAL:
It is somewhat ironic that Denmark’s economic growth in the first half of the year was driven almost entirely by the stellar performance of Novo Nordisk, a Danish pharmaceutical group. The company’s increasingly popular drug, Wegovy, tackles another kind of expansion: human waistlines. This week it became Europe’s most valuable company. Its stock has risen over fourfold since 2018. The US approved the medication two years ago, and on Monday Britain’s NHS launched it on a limited basis. The fanfare behind the weight-loss injection, and others like it, is understandable. They have enormous potential to boost public well-being and slash healthcare costs throughout the world.
Obesity is a chronic and relapsing disease. Since 1975 its prevalence has nearly tripled. Over 1 billion people worldwide are obese, according to the World Health Organisation, with the number expected to almost double by 2035. More sedentary lifestyles, combined with the rising availability of cheap processed foods, mean it is a problem for both rich and developing countries. Overweight and obesity is the fifth leading risk for global deaths, and results in a higher prevalence of knock-on illnesses including diabetes, heart disease, certain cancers and more severe symptoms of Covid-19. The social stigma that comes with it can also lead to mental illness.
The effectiveness of a new class of weight-loss drugs such as Wegovy, so-called GLP-1 receptor agonists, underscores the vital and innovative work of pharmaceutical scientists. The injection works by suppressing appetite and slowing the movement of food through the gut. In clinical trials, those on semaglutide, the chemical used in Wegovy, lost 15 per cent of their body weight. US company Eli Lilly has also applied for regulatory approval to use its diabetes drug Mounjaro to treat obesity.
The financial dividends will be vast. Investors will be focused on the projected US$200 billion (NZ$340b) market value within the next decade. But the potential to reduce the strain on government budgets will be most significant, just as demands for health spending rise more generally. The World Obesity Federation expects the economic cost of overweight and obesity to reach 3 per cent of global gross domestic product annually by 2035 — on par with the impact of Covid-19 in 2020. This includes the impact on healthcare expenditure, reduced productivity at work, and premature retirement or death.