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Medical Management of Obesity: A Comprehensive Review of Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-Approved and Investigational Therapies.

Cureus · 2025

Last updated 2026-05-28

This review covers FDA-approved weight-loss medications like semaglutide, tirzepatide, and others, which work in different ways and can lead to varying amounts of weight loss. Common side effects include stomach issues, gallbladder problems, and risks like pancreatitis or thyroid tumors. Newer drugs, such as orforglipron and retatrutide, are showing even greater weight-loss effects in early studies. The review also highlights the need for more long-term research on safety and how well weight loss is maintained after stopping treatment.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalCureus, 2025
Citations2
Molecules
Conditions studied Obesity

Abstract

The global rise in obesity has accelerated both clinical and pharmaceutical innovation in antiobesity pharmacotherapy. This narrative review synthesizes current evidence on Food and Drug Administration-approved medications and emerging investigational agents that are shaping clinical practice. We summarize mechanisms of action, pivotal efficacy data, safety profiles, indications, prescribing guidance, and key uncertainties. Approved long-term agents, orlistat, phentermine/topiramate, naltrexone/bupropion, liraglutide, semaglutide, and tirzepatide, differ in mechanism, weight-loss magnitude, and safety considerations. Semaglutide and tirzepatide have redefined expectations for pharmacological weight loss, while next-generation drugs, such as oral glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists (e.g., orforglipron) and multireceptor agonists (e.g., retatrutide), show even greater efficacy in early studies. Common safety concerns include gastrointestinal effects, gallbladder events, pancreatitis risk, thyroid C-cell tumor warnings, teratogenicity, and cost barriers. Appropriate patient selection depends on body mass index, comorbidities, contraindications, and treatment goals, with close monitoring throughout therapy. Long-term data on cardiovascular outcomes and posttreatment weight durability are emerging. Future research should prioritize direct comparative trials, real-world effectiveness, long-term safety, and strategies to improve access and adherence. This review offers clinicians a concise, evidence-based guide for obesity pharmacotherapy and outlines key research priorities as the treatment landscape rapidly evolves.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 41393574 ↗