Updated
Updated · RNZ · Jul 2
Researchers Probe Ozempic for Addiction Treatment as Type 2 Diabetes Drug Shows Brain-Reward Effects
Updated
Updated · RNZ · Jul 2

Researchers Probe Ozempic for Addiction Treatment as Type 2 Diabetes Drug Shows Brain-Reward Effects

3 articles · Updated · RNZ · Jul 2

Summary

  • Researchers are examining whether Ozempic and similar weight-loss drugs could help treat addiction, extending their use beyond diabetes and appetite control.
  • Dr Robert Munn of the University of Otago says the interest centers on how the medicines may alter the brain’s reward system, a pathway closely tied to addictive behavior.
  • Ozempic first gained approval for type 2 diabetes before becoming globally prominent for suppressing appetite and driving weight loss.
  • The work reflects a broader effort to test whether blockbuster GLP-1 drugs can be repurposed for conditions outside their original metabolic role.

Insights

Can a drug that dulls food cravings also treat addiction, or does it risk blunting all of life's joys?
By hijacking the brain's reward system to fight addiction, what permanent changes are these weight-loss drugs leaving behind?