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Case report of the successful use of semaglutide to achieve target BMI prior to renal transplant in two patients with end-stage-kidney-disease.

Nephrology (Carlton) · 2024

Last updated 2026-05-28

Two patients with severe kidney disease who were on dialysis and unable to receive a kidney transplant due to obesity lost 16% and 12.6% of their body weight within 9 months after taking semaglutide, a GLP-1 drug. One patient was placed on the transplant waitlist, and the other received a kidney transplant after this weight loss.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalNephrology (Carlton), 2024
Citations9
Relative citation ratio1.94
NIH percentile73
Molecules semaglutide
Conditions studied Obesity, Chronic Kidney Disease

Abstract

The following cases demonstrate a proof of concept for the safe and effective use of the glucagon-like-peptide-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA) semaglutide for weight loss in obese, non-diabetic, end stage kidney disease (ESKD) patients on haemodialysis (HD), who are unable to undergo renal transplantation due to obesity. Obesity is a common barrier to wait-listing for renal transplantation with effective, broadly applicable weight loss strategies lacking. GLP-1 RAs have been shown to be effective adjuncts to achieve weight loss in non-diabetic obese people. However, the major clinical trials excluded patients with ESKD on dialysis. This paper outlines the successful use of semaglutide to achieve a target body mass index (BMI) prior to renal transplant wait-listing in two obese, non-diabetic, HD patients. These patients achieved a 16% and 12.6% weight loss in under 9 months with one now waitlisted and the other transplanted. This strategy has the potential for broader use in this patient cohort to improve wait-list times by overcoming this common barrier to renal transplantation.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 38369756 ↗

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