Effectiveness of Adjuvant Semaglutide Following Bariatric Metabolic Surgery.
Obes Surg · 2025
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of patients who had weight-loss surgery but still had insufficient weight loss, adding semaglutide (a GLP-1 drug) led to a median total weight loss of 7.5%. Most patients (78%) took a dose of 1 milligram or less per week, side effects were rare, and most continued the treatment for more than 6 months, though long-term use beyond a year was uncommon.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Obes Surg, 2025 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 6 |
| Relative citation ratio | 2.29 |
| Molecules | semaglutide |
| Conditions studied | Obesity, Type 2 Diabetes |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Obesity is a relapsing condition and response to anti-obesity therapies appears to be normally distributed. Therefore, some patients undergoing metabolic bariatric surgery (MBS) will demonstrate a partial response to therapy. When prescribing therapies to patients living with obesity (PwO) the median total weight loss (TWL) gives a good indication of the likely utility of prescription for that individual. GLP-1 agonists (GLP1a) offer patients a reasonable prospect of clinically significant weight loss even if they have been previously treated with MBS.
METHODS: A retrospective review of prospectively collected data in a single bariatric clinic was performed. Patients with insufficient weight loss at any time point were offered semaglutide therapy with doses titrated depending on response to treatment, tolerability, availability and affordability. Duration of therapy, highest dose tolerated, anthropometric measures and reported side effects were recorded. Reasons for discontinuation were noted where possible; however, discontinuation due to medication unavailability was not reliably captured in the dataset.
RESULTS: The median dose tolerated was 1 mg s/c per week, and 78% tolerated ≤ 1 mg as the maximum achieved dose. The median TWL was 7.5% and side effects were uncommon. Most patients took therapy for > 6 months, but continued therapy > 1 year was uncommon.
CONCLUSION: Overall 'real-world' utility of semaglutide after MBS may potentially be hampered by supply and cost issues more than issues associated with effectiveness or side effect profile.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 39982604 ↗
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