Dysesthesia associated with GLP-1 agonist therapies: data-mining analysis and literature review.
This pharmacovigilance study investigated reports of dysesthesia (abnormal skin sensations, particularly burning sensations) associated with GLP-1 receptor agonists, including semaglutide, tirzepatide, exenatide, and others. The researchers conducted a disproportionality analysis using VigiBase — the WHO's global drug safety database — focusing on the High Level Term "Paraesthesia and dysesthesia," supplemented by a qualitative review of case narratives from the French Pharmacovigilance database and a broader literature review. The analysis found that exenatide was significantly associated with hypoesthesia and oral paraesthesia, while semaglutide and tirzepatide were associated with hyperaesthesia; semaglutide was also linked to dysesthesia and burning sensations specifically. The study suggests dysesthesia may be dose-dependent and more frequent with more potent agents used at higher doses. Many reported cases involved drug discontinuation followed by spontaneous resolution, and some rechallenge cases were documented. Key limitations include the inherent biases of spontaneous reporting systems (underreporting, confounding, notoriety bias), the inability to establish causality, and the absence of controlled comparison groups. The authors conclude that pharmacovigilance data reinforces signals already observed in clinical trials of semaglutide, tirzepatide, and retatrutide.