Updated
Updated · The Pharmaceutical Journal · Jun 17
Study of 60,000 Patients Finds 58% Restart GLP-1 Drugs Within 2 Years
Updated
Updated · The Pharmaceutical Journal · Jun 17

Study of 60,000 Patients Finds 58% Restart GLP-1 Drugs Within 2 Years

3 articles · Updated · The Pharmaceutical Journal · Jun 17

Summary

  • Insurance-claims data from 60,000 U.S. adults with type 2 diabetes showed GLP-1 use was often intermittent: 42% of those who stopped restarted within one year and 58% within two years.
  • About 40% discontinued within the first year and nearly 60% by two years, with discontinuation defined as a gap of more than 60 days between prescriptions.
  • Tirzepatide users were 41% less likely to discontinue than liraglutide users, while Semaglutide users were 28% less likely to stop than patients on older drugs.
  • Researchers said the pattern suggests these medicines are not usually abandoned permanently, but stop-and-start use could weaken benefits such as protection against heart attacks, kidney disease progression and other complications.

Insights

If stopping GLP-1 drugs means rapid weight regain, are patients facing a lifelong medication sentence?
As new oral GLP-1s emerge, will the costly and disruptive 'start-and-stop' cycle finally be broken?
Can genetic testing soon predict who will benefit from GLP-1s, personalizing a path to treatment success?