Gastrointestinal disorders potentially associated with Semaglutide: an analysis from the Eudravigilance Database.
Expert Opin Drug Saf · 2023
Last updated 2026-05-28A review of European safety reports found that over half (53.2%) of adverse reactions linked to semaglutide involved gastrointestinal issues, making it the most common problem reported. Gastrointestinal disorders were also the most frequently reported severe reactions for both oral and injectable forms of semaglutide, accounting for 50.0% and 47.2% of cases, respectively. Compared to two other diabetes drugs, sitagliptin and empagliflozin, semaglutide had significantly more reported gastrointestinal side effects (p < 0.00001).
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Expert Opin Drug Saf, 2023 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 1 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.08 |
| NIH percentile | 7 |
| Molecules | semaglutide |
| Conditions studied | Gastroparesis |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Semaglutide is a Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist used in the second-line treatment of poorly controlled type 2 diabetes and can be used in monotherapy or associated with other oral antidiabetics or even insulin, increasing the effectiveness of the treatment. This work aims to analyze the profile of adverse drug reactions reported for semaglutide in Eudravigilance.
RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: Data on Individual Cases Safety Reports were obtained from the database of the centralized European spontaneous reporting system Eudravigilance by accessing www.adrreports.eu. (1 December 2021).
RESULTS: It is possible to observe a high prevalence of gastrointestinal disorders (N = 3502, 53.2%). The most severe reported cases were primarily gastrointestinal disorders, metabolic, and nutritional disorders, eye disorders, renal and urinary disorders and cardiac disorders, with an evident higher prevalence of adverse gastrointestinal events both in oral and injectable dosage form (N = 133, 50.0% vs N = 588, 47.2%, respectively). Through a comparative analysis, semaglutide had a greater number of reported gastrointestinal adverse events compared to sitagliptin and empaglifozin (p < 0.00001).
CONCLUSIONS: Semaglutide has a good safety profile, however the definition of subgroups within the type 2 diabetes population who are particularly prone to develop serious adverse event when treated with GLP-1 RAs is crucial.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 36695099 ↗
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