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Association between various dosage forms of semaglutide and ocular adverse events in a real-world setting.

BMC Ophthalmol · 2025

Last updated 2026-05-28

A study using U.S. FDA data found 1,733 reports of eye-related side effects linked to the diabetes and weight-loss drug semaglutide, with 1,541 cases tied to injections and 192 to oral tablets. Most eye issues occurred within the first month, and women reported more problems than men. Blurred vision was the most common side effect, making up 34% of cases with oral tablets. Injectable forms were more often linked to serious eye conditions like retinal detachment or bleeding.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalBMC Ophthalmol, 2025
Citations7
Relative citation ratio2.62
Molecules semaglutide

Abstract

BACKGROUND: This study systematically compares the risk of long-term ocular adverse events between subcutaneous and oral semaglutide preparations to assess pathway-specific safety differences. METHODS: In this study, the Report odds ratio (ROR) technique was employed to detect signals of adverse drug reactions (ADRs) associated with the use of semaglutide. Analysis was conducted on data extracted from the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) database, covering the period from 2004(Q1) through 2024(Q3). This investigation encompasses a descriptive analysis focused on the administration of semaglutide through various routes, encompassing a broad range of demographics including gender (male and female), age groups, along with other demographic data and the timing of disease onset. Following this, the study employs the ROR methodology to assess the differential adverse event signals across distinct semaglutide formulations. RESULTS: We categorized the eye as the System Organ Class (SOC) and obtained 1733 ADE reports related to it from the FAERS database. Of these, 1541 reports were associated with injectables, while tablets were linked to 192 ADE reports. In both dosage forms, most cases occurred within the first month of administration, although the median time to onset (TTO) differed, with injectables identified at 7.00 [IQR 0.00-56.00] days and tablets at only 3.50 [IQR 0.00-35.00] days. It is worth noting that 5.41% of patients administered subcutaneous injections and 2.17% of those receiving oral medications reported ADEs following one year of treatment with semaglutide. Furthermore, female patients exhibited a higher susceptibility to ocular adverse reactions compared to their male counterparts. Regarding the primary preferred terms (PTs), blurred vision constitutes 34.33% of the total ADEs associated with tablet formulations. This incidence is marginally higher than that observed with injectable formulations. This investigation further discerned ocular ADEs signals associated with specific formulations: subcutaneous injections have a higher frequency of reports concerning retinal complications, such as diabetic retinopathy, ischemic optic neuropathy, retinal detachment, retinal tear, and retinal hemorrhage. CONCLUSION: The results of this study identified a significant difference between subcutaneous and oral semaglutide in ocular ADE risk, providing some evidence for dosage form selection and risk monitoring for clinical use.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 40289093 ↗

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