You don’t need to take drugs like Ozempic consistently to lose weight


Ozempic and other GLP-1 drugs may not need to be taken as frequently as they’re prescribed

Associated Press / Alamy

People who take GLP-1 drugs like Ozempic can lose weight even if they face disruptions in accessing the medications, which may reassure users when the therapies are in short supply.

Drugs like semaglutide, also known by the brand names Ozempic and Wegovy, have transformed how we treat obesity, but soaring demand has led to frequent supply shortages. In the US, disruptions can also occur if health insurance companies change which drugs they will cover. For instance, CVS Caremark, which helps insurers manage prescription plans, recently stopped covering Eli Lilly’s Zepbound, which is based on the GLP-1 drug tirzepatide.

To explore the effects of such disruptions, Kaelen Medeiros and her colleagues at the New York-based company Calibrate – which provides medications and digital support to help people lose weight – analysed data from more than 6000 people in the US who paid to enrol in the firm’s programme for one year between 2021 and 2024. Nearly 90 per cent of the participants had obesity, while the rest were overweight with a weight-related condition like type 2 diabetes, high cholesterol or heart disease.

The programme gave them access to an app that offered lessons, every two weeks, on how to optimise lifestyle habits such as diet and exercise. Plus, every couple of weeks they received a one-to-one chat with a health coach who helped them implement these lessons. For an additional fee, all of the participants were given GLP-1 drugs, such as Ozempic, mostly on a weekly basis.

By the end of the programme, 73 per cent of the participants had experienced one or more disruptions in their GLP-1 access, defined as at least 13 weeks without the drugs. These participants received an average of eight months of GLP-1 supplies over the one-year trial. The individuals still lost 14 per cent of their weight, on average, compared with 17 per cent weight loss among those without such disruptions. The results were presented at the annual meeting of the Endocrine Society in San Francisco, California, on 14 July.

Similar rates of weight loss occurred among those with and without a continuous GLP-1 drug supply in a second year of the programme. “No disruptions would be better, but it is great to see that even with disruptions, clinically significant weight loss can be achieved,” says Medeiros.

“The study is reassuring,” says Priya Jaisinghani at NYU Langone Health in New York. But further studies should explore the weight-loss impact of the health coaching and lifestyle lessons that the participants received, she says. The researchers did not measure how well the individuals in each group engaged in this part of the programme. It is possible differences in adherence could have affected the results, says Medeiros.

Some of the participants were also taking metformin, a type 2 diabetes drug that can contribute to weight loss, which may have also affected the results, Medeiros says. However, metformin is linked to losing only around 2 per cent of your body weight.

Topics:

  • medical drugs /
  • weight loss



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Publish date : 2025-07-14 20:00:00

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