Once-weekly 2.4 mg Semaglutide for Weight Management in Obesity: A Game Changer?
touchREV Endocrinol · 2022
Last updated 2026-05-28A once-weekly dose of 2.4 mg semaglutide helped people with obesity lose significant and sustained weight, with results much better than older weight-loss drugs. Regulators approved it for use alongside diet and exercise in adults with obesity or overweight who also have at least one weight-related health issue. Newer drugs like tirzepatide and cagrilintide have shown even greater weight loss in studies, leading to a shift in diabetes treatment toward focusing on weight management.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | touchREV Endocrinol, 2022 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 19 |
| Relative citation ratio | 1.71 |
| NIH percentile | 69 |
| Molecules | semaglutide |
| Conditions studied | Obesity |
Abstract
The treatment of obesity can no longer be reduced to a simplistic view of weight loss. Metabolic adaptation leads to systematic weight regain following weight-loss efforts, and new obesity treatments should therefore aim to induce long-standing double-digit weight loss, and thus improve and even reverse obesity-associated comorbidities such as type 2 diabetes. Until now, only metabolic surgery has been able to achieve such a goal, but this invasive procedure cannot be offered on a large scale. Among the alternatives, lifestyle interventions and drug therapies have often been disappointing. The recent availability of once-weekly subcutaneous 2.4 mg semaglutide (a glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist; Wegovy™ Novo Nordisk A/S, Bagsværd, Denmark) has changed the scene, and semaglutide is considered a 'game changer' in the treatment of obesity. The results from the phase III STEP (Semaglutide treatment effect in people with obesity) clinical programme have shown that semaglutide provides clinically meaningful and sustained weight loss in ranges much higher than those achieved with previously available pharmacotherapies. These results led to the approval of semaglutide by regulatory authorities as an adjunct to a reduced-calorie diet and increased physical activity in people with obesity or overweight, with at least one weight-related comorbidity. With data from phase II and III clinical trials showing that newer drugs (i.e. the glucagon-like peptide-1 and gastric inhibitory polypeptide dual receptor agonist tirzepatide and the amylin agonist cagrilintide, either alone or combined) produce a greater sustained weight loss than semaglutide, an upstream 'weight-centric' strategy has emerged as a new standard for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 35949360 ↗
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