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The peptide literature, summarized and graded.

Every paper distilled to a plain-language summary with an honest evidence grade — from strong human trials to animal-only signals. 43 papers indexed and counting.

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Filtered by #semaglutide · clear
Limited · human

Drug-induced gastric motility disorders: A disproportionality analysis from the FAERS and CVARD databases.

This pharmacovigilance study analyzed over 58 million adverse event reports from the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS, 2004–2025) and cross-validated findings against the Canada Vigilance Adverse Reaction Online Database (CVARD) to identify drugs associated with delayed gastric emptying and gastroesophageal reflux. Using three signal-detection algorithms — Reporting Odds Ratio (ROR), Proportional Reporting Ratio (PRR), and Bayesian Confidence Propagation Neural Network (BCPNN) — the study screened 50 drugs and found 20 with positive signals across all three methods. GLP-1 receptor agonists showed the strongest associations, with semaglutide exhibiting the highest signal for impaired gastric emptying (ROR: 80.27). Other drug classes flagged included insulin formulations (notably insulin degludec), bisphosphonates, angiotensin receptor blockers, and trofinetide. Weibull time-to-onset analysis further characterized temporal patterns, ranging from very early onset (trofinetide, median ~6.6 days) to markedly delayed onset (immunoglobulin G, median ~535 days). Key limitations include the inherent reporting biases of spontaneous pharmacovigilance databases, inability to establish causality, and potential confounding by indication or co-medications. The authors suggest findings should inform enhanced pharmacovigilance and clinical monitoring strategies.

PloS one · Jun 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

Boerhaave's syndrome associated with glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist use: a case report.

This case report describes a woman in her 50s who developed Boerhaave's syndrome (spontaneous full-thickness esophageal perforation) in the context of GLP-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA) use — specifically semaglutide restarted abruptly at the maximum weekly dose after several months off therapy. She presented with vasopressor-dependent shock, respiratory failure, pneumomediastinum, and bilateral pleural effusions. An esophagram confirmed a contained esophageal perforation. Initial management included endoscopic stent placement, nasojejunal feeding, and chest tube drainage with early improvement. Two months later she was readmitted with necrotizing pneumonia, esophagopleural fistula, stent migration, and abscess, requiring left thoracotomy, decortication, abscess drainage, lung wedge resection, and intercostal muscle flap repair. At 10-month follow-up, the esophagus had healed on endoscopy. The authors propose that GLP-1 RA–induced gastroparesis contributed to forceful emesis and transmural rupture. Key limitations include the inherent inability to establish causality from a single case, and the absence of a control group or systematic population-level data linking GLP-1 RAs to esophageal perforation.

Journal of cardiothoracic surgery · Jun 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

Impact of Preoperative Semaglutide Discontinuation Timing on Postoperative Outcomes in Aesthetic Abdominoplasty: A Retrospective Comparative Study.

This retrospective cohort study examined how the timing of preoperative semaglutide discontinuation affects short-term surgical outcomes in patients undergoing aesthetic lipoabdominoplasty. Eighty non-diabetic patients were divided into four groups: those who continued semaglutide until the day of surgery (Group A), those who discontinued 2 weeks prior (Group B), those who discontinued 4 weeks prior (Group C), and semaglutide-naïve controls (Group D). Groups were matched for age, BMI, and surgical technique, and 30-day postoperative complications were tracked. The study found that Group A had the highest complication rate at 45%, encompassing wound dehiscence, infection, and seroma formation. Group B showed a moderate reduction (30%), while Group C's complication rate (10%) was comparable to the control group (10%). Gastrointestinal intolerance and prolonged drain duration were also more common among patients with recent or ongoing semaglutide use. No reoperations or readmissions were recorded. The authors concluded that a 4-week preoperative discontinuation window effectively normalizes complication rates. Key limitations include the retrospective design, small sample size (n=80 across four groups), and the absence of randomization, blinding, or long-term follow-up.

Aesthetic plastic surgery · Jun 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

Real-world and computational identification of herbal candidates associated with adverse event patterns in glucagon-like peptide-1 therapy for obesity.

This cross-sectional pharmacovigilance study analyzed 142,705 adverse event (AE) reports for GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) from the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (2015–2025), focusing on 4,090 reports linked to obesity indications. The authors found gastrointestinal events were most common, 76% of reports involved female patients, and most events onset within 0–30 days. Semaglutide showed a distinct distribution including a higher proportion of late-onset events (≥360 days), while tirzepatide showed negative reporting odds ratios for several gastrointestinal events. Strong disproportionality signals were identified for biliary, pancreatic, renal, and coagulation events. Separately, the study constructed herb-compound-target-AE networks using HERB 2.0 and the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database, applying graph convolutional network (GCN) modeling to identify herbal candidates—including Liquorice Root, Mulberry Leaf, Dahurian Angelica Root, Danshen Root, and Ginkgo Leaf—potentially associated with GLP-1 RA AE profiles. GCN performance was moderate (AUC-ROC 0.666–0.798). The authors explicitly note findings are exploratory and hypothesis-generating, with results limited by spontaneous reporting biases and computational modeling constraints. Independent experimental and clinical validation is required before any clinical application.

Scientific reports · Jun 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

GLP-1-based therapy and ICD-10-documented heart failure or respiratory failure events in non-diabetic adults with rheumatoid arthritis and obesity: a TriNetX federated cohort study.

This retrospective federated cohort study used the TriNetX US Collaborative Network to examine whether GLP-1-based therapy (semaglutide or tirzepatide) was associated with lower rates of ICD-10-documented heart failure (HF) or respiratory failure (RF) in non-diabetic adults with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and obesity (BMI ≥30 kg/m²). Patients were required to have baseline disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD) use, and those with diabetes or overlapping systemic autoimmune diseases were excluded. After propensity score matching on 68 covariates (1:1), 3,483 patients remained per cohort. The study found that GLP-1-based therapy was associated with a substantially lower hazard of first post-landmark composite HF or RF events during days 91–365. In absolute terms, the primary composite occurred in 0.7% of GLP-1 users versus 1.8% of never-users, corresponding to roughly one fewer event per 100 patients. Heart failure and respiratory failure analyzed separately showed directionally consistent lower hazards, though individual event counts were small. The authors acknowledge that the findings are hypothesis-generating only, are limited by the retrospective, administrative-data design and potential residual confounding, and require prospective validation before informing clinical practice.

Clinical rheumatology · Jun 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

GLP-1 receptor agonist adjunct therapy stabilises Ramadan dysglycaemia in insulin-treated diabetes: a CGM-based study.

This prospective, matched controlled study used continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) via FreeStyle Libre to characterize glycaemic patterns during Ramadan 2025 in 54 adults with insulin-treated diabetes. Three matched groups of 18 participants each were compared: type 2 diabetes on basal-bolus insulin alone (BB), type 2 diabetes on basal-bolus insulin plus adjunctive semaglutide or tirzepatide (BB+), and type 1 diabetes on basal-bolus insulin. CGM data were collected over 28 days pre-Ramadan and 29 days during Ramadan. The study found that dysglycaemia was predominantly driven by the post-iftar (meal-breaking) period. The BB group showed marked deterioration in glycaemic control during non-fasting hours. In contrast, the BB+ group demonstrated significantly better time-in-range (74.4% vs. 36.8%), a lower glucose management indicator (6.9% vs. 8.3%), and an approximately 61% reduction in post-iftar glucose excursions, without increased hypoglycaemia or treatment discontinuations. Limitations include a relatively small matched sample size, a single Ramadan observational period, and non-randomized group assignment, which may introduce residual confounding despite matching.

Diabetes research and clinical practice · Jun 2026DOI ↗
Limited · humanPreprint

Semaglutide and Tirzepatide in Type 1 Diabetes: Real-World Insulin Deintensification, Cardiovascular Outcomes and Safety Assessment

This retrospective, propensity-score matched observational study used de-identified federated U.S. electronic health record (EHR) data to examine real-world associations of semaglutide (n=1,424) and tirzepatide (n=578) use in adults with type 1 diabetes (T1D) compared to 1:1 matched T1D controls (n=2,002) who did not receive these agents, over a study period from 2018–2025. Neither drug is approved for T1D. The study found that both agents were associated with statistically significant reductions in total daily insulin dose, HbA1c, and body weight at 12 and 24 months compared to controls. Greater insulin reductions were observed in semaglutide users who achieved higher weight loss or dose escalation. The pre-vs-post safety analysis identified predominantly gastrointestinal adverse events; DKA, severe hypoglycemia, pancreatitis, and retinopathy did not increase significantly overall, though patients with >30% insulin dose reduction had higher DKA rates. Semaglutide and tirzepatide exposure was associated with lower all-cause mortality and major adverse cardiovascular events versus matched controls. Key limitations include the observational design, EHR data quality constraints, off-label prescribing confounding, and preprint status, meaning findings have not yet undergone peer review.

Unknown journal · Jun 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

Glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist use and risk of arthroplasty for knee osteoarthritis: retrospective database analysis.

This retrospective cohort study used the TriNetX Global Research Network to examine whether GLP-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA) use was associated with a reduced risk of total knee arthroplasty (TKA) in adults with knee osteoarthritis (OA) diagnosed between 2010 and 2024. Patients exposed to GLP-1 RAs (either any agent or newer agents—semaglutide or tirzepatide) were propensity score matched to unexposed controls, balancing for age, sex, race, musculoskeletal diagnoses, obesity-related conditions, BMI, and healthcare access proxies. Matched cohort sizes ranged from approximately 13,000 to 42,000 patients depending on the exposure class and treatment duration analyzed (1 or 3 years). The primary outcome was cumulative TKA incidence at 1, 3, 5, and 8 years, estimated via Kaplan-Meier curves and Cox proportional hazards models. The study found that GLP-1 RA use was associated with significantly lower TKA incidence across all subgroups, with larger reductions observed with longer treatment durations and with newer-generation agents. The authors suggest the findings are consistent with possible disease-modifying activity beyond weight loss, but acknowledge that as a retrospective observational design, causality cannot be established, and prospective randomized trials are needed.

Regional anesthesia and pain medicine · Jun 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

Renal or Hepatic Impairment Does Not Affect Pharmacokinetics, Safety, or Tolerability of Subcutaneous Cagrilintide.

Two single-dose pharmacokinetic studies investigated whether renal or hepatic impairment affects how the body processes cagrilintide, a long-acting amylin agonist in development for weight management and type 2 diabetes (also studied in combination with semaglutide as "CagriSema"). In each study, adult participants were grouped by organ function (normal, mild, moderate, or severe impairment) and received a single subcutaneous dose of cagrilintide. The renal study enrolled 33 participants and the hepatic study enrolled 32. The primary measure was total drug exposure (AUC₀–∞), with secondary measures including peak concentration (Cmax) and time to peak (tmax). Both studies found that cagrilintide exposure was broadly similar across all impairment levels; estimated AUC ratios relative to normal function ranged from approximately 0.99 to 1.23, with overlapping confidence intervals. No serious adverse events, study withdrawals, or deaths occurred, and no increase in adverse events was observed with worsening organ impairment. The authors concluded that dose adjustment may not be necessary in these populations. Key limitations include small group sizes, single-dose design, and the inability to generalize to steady-state conditions or combined therapies.

Clinical pharmacokinetics · Jun 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

Evaluation of the safety profile of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists: a focus on thyroid cancer-related adverse events by using the European pharmacovigilance database.

This observational pharmacovigilance study analyzed Individual Case Safety Reports (ICSRs) from the European EudraVigilance (EV) database to investigate whether GLP-1 receptor agonists (semaglutide, liraglutide, exenatide, lixisenatide, dulaglutide) and the dual GLP-1/GIP agonist tirzepatide are disproportionately associated with thyroid cancer-related adverse events. The study retrieved 34,956 ICSRs reported between January 2022 and September 2024. Most adverse events affected adult and elderly female patients, with gastrointestinal disorders being the most commonly reported category. Using disproportionality analysis (Reporting Odds Ratio, ROR), the study found that semaglutide had a statistically significantly lower probability of thyroid cancer-related adverse event reporting compared to tirzepatide (ROR = 0.54, 95% CI 0.37–0.81). The authors acknowledge key limitations inherent to pharmacovigilance databases, including reporting bias, confounding by indication, and the inability to establish causality. They conclude that findings must be interpreted cautiously and that further prospective studies are needed to clarify whether a true causal relationship exists between GLP-1 RAs and thyroid cancer risk.

Pharmacological reports : PR · May 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

Differential Biliary Adverse Event Signals Among Glp-1 Receptor Agonists: A FAERS Disproportionality Analysis.

This pharmacovigilance study analyzed reports submitted to the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) to compare biliary adverse events (AEs) across five GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs): semaglutide, tirzepatide, liraglutide, exenatide, and dulaglutide. After deduplication, 3,460 reports were included. Using semaglutide as the reference, the authors calculated proportional reporting ratios (PRR), reporting odds ratios (ROR), and Fisher exact tests across five biliary outcomes: cholelithiasis, cholecystitis, biliary colic, bile duct stone, and cholangitis. The study found that compared with semaglutide, exenatide and tirzepatide showed lower relative reporting for bile duct stone, while exenatide and dulaglutide showed lower relative reporting for biliary colic. Dulaglutide showed higher relative reporting for cholangitis. Exenatide, liraglutide, and tirzepatide all showed higher relative reporting for cholecystitis and cholelithiasis. Sensitivity and subgroup analyses were broadly consistent, though rarer outcomes lost statistical significance. Key limitations include the inherent biases of spontaneous reporting databases (underreporting, confounding by indication, and lack of denominator data), which preclude causal inference. The authors concluded that biliary AE reporting patterns differ meaningfully across agents within the GLP-1RA class.

Digestive diseases and sciences · May 2026DOI ↗
Limited · humanPreprint

Class-Wide Impaired Gastric Emptying Signal Across Nine GLP-1 Receptor Agonist Agents: Indication-Stratified Pharmacovigilance Analysis of 6,868 Cases in FDA FAERS (2004-2024) with Cross-National Validation

This large pharmacovigilance study analyzed 20.3 million FDA FAERS adverse event reports (2004–2024) to investigate impaired gastric emptying (IGE) as a potential class-wide adverse effect of GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs). Researchers identified 6,868 IGE reports across nine GLP-1 RA agents and applied the proportional reporting ratio (PRR) method with sensitivity analyses, supplemented by cross-national validation using 29 reports from Brazil's pharmacovigilance database. The study found that all nine agents exceeded established Evans signal detection criteria, with PRRs ranging from 4.4 (exenatide) to 83.9 (injectable semaglutide). Notably, oral and injectable semaglutide showed comparable PRRs, suggesting a systemic rather than route-dependent mechanism. Tirzepatide prescribed for type 2 diabetes showed a substantially higher PRR than the same drug prescribed for obesity, which the authors interpret as a possible effect of diabetic autonomic neuropathy. A pre-litigation signal analysis was also conducted to account for potential notoriety bias. Key limitations include the inherent constraints of spontaneous pharmacovigilance data—including reporting bias, lack of denominator data, and inability to establish causation—as well as the small cross-national validation sample (n=29). The authors conclude that findings support pre-treatment risk stratification discussions for gastroparesis in GLP-1 RA candidates.

Unknown journal · May 2026DOI ↗
Limited · humanPreprint

Comparative Post-Marketing Pharmacovigilance of Five GLP-1 Receptor Agonists: A Disproportionality Analysis of 412,643 FDA Adverse Event Reports (2004-2024)

This large pharmacovigilance study extracted 412,643 adverse event reports for five GLP-1 receptor agonists (semaglutide, tirzepatide, liraglutide, dulaglutide, and exenatide) from the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) spanning 2004–2024, comparing disproportionality signals using proportional reporting ratios (PRR) and reporting odds ratios (ROR). The study identified 154 drug-event signals overall. The most notable finding was a strong gastroparesis signal for semaglutide (PRR 88.9, 95% CI 85.4–92.6), which the authors describe as substantially higher than prior published estimates and as robust across three pre-specified sensitivity analyses using different comparator groups. All five agents showed statistically significant gastroparesis signals. Gastroparesis reports were consistently female-predominant across all agents (female-to-male ratio 2.7–3.6×). Tirzepatide's adverse event profile was notably dominated by device-usability reports rather than clinical events. Case-fatality rates varied across agents (0.6% to 3.7%). Key limitations include inherent FAERS biases (underreporting, stimulated reporting, lack of denominator data, and confounding by indication), which preclude causal inference or incidence estimation. The authors acknowledge the preprint status of this work.

Unknown journal · May 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

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.

European journal of clinical pharmacology · May 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

Psychosocial Outcomes in Telemedicine and Long-Acting Incretin-Specific Behavioral Intervention.

This single-arm pragmatic trial examined psychosocial outcomes in 180 adults with obesity (mean age 44.1 years; 91% female; 81% white; mean weight 102.6 kg) enrolled in a telemedicine program (WeightWatchers Clinic) who received semaglutide or tirzepatide alongside an adjunctive virtual behavioral intervention tailored for patients on long-acting incretin therapy. Psychosocial measures—including depression (PHQ-8), perceived stress (Perceived Stress Scale), well-being (WHO-5), weight bias internalization (WBIS-2F), and weight-related quality of life (IWQOL-Lite)—were collected at baseline, 12 weeks, and 24 weeks. Wilcoxon signed-rank tests with False Discovery Rate correction were used; an intent-to-treat analysis using last observation carried forward (LOCF) was also performed. The study found statistically significant improvements from baseline to 24 weeks across all five psychosocial outcomes. Key limitations include the absence of a control group, a predominantly white and female sample limiting generalizability, and the inability to separate medication effects from behavioral intervention effects. The findings suggest an association between the combined telehealth and behavioral approach and improved psychosocial outcomes, but causality cannot be established.

Obesity science & practice · May 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

Risk factors for drug-related impaired gastric emptying: a pharmacovigilance analysis of the FDA adverse event reporting system.

This retrospective pharmacovigilance study analyzed the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (FAERS) from Q1 2004 through Q2 2025 to identify risk factors for drug-related impaired gastric emptying (IGE), a recognized contributor to perioperative pulmonary aspiration risk. Researchers identified 731 drugs associated with IGE reports. Among the most frequently reported were antidiabetic agents, particularly five GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs): semaglutide, dulaglutide, tirzepatide, exenatide, and liraglutide. The study employed disproportionality analysis, logistic regression, LASSO regression, and time-to-onset analysis to characterize these associations. Multi-factor analysis identified female sex and younger age as patient-level risk factors for drug-related IGE. Key limitations include the inherent biases of spontaneous adverse event reporting (underreporting, confounding by indication, lack of denominator data), the inability to establish causality, and incomplete clinical information in FAERS records. The authors suggest findings may help clinicians identify patients at elevated risk for drug-related IGE and inform perioperative fasting and anesthetic planning, particularly given the growing clinical use of GLP-1RAs.

Frontiers in pharmacology · May 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

GLPs Significantly Decrease the Risk of Postoperative Surgical Complications: A TriNetX Retrospective Cohort Study.

This retrospective cohort study used the TriNetX Research Network — a large federated database — to examine whether GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLPs: semaglutide, tirzepatide, liraglutide, dulaglutide, exenatide, albiglutide, and lixisenatide) were associated with reduced postoperative inflammatory complications (IC) in patients undergoing dermatologic surgery. The study population included patients who underwent Mohs Micrographic Surgery or wide local excisions for melanoma or nonmelanoma skin cancer. Outcomes tracked over one month included wound disruption, hematoma, post-procedure infection, skin and subcutaneous tissue infection, and other procedural complications. After adjusting for demographics and proinflammatory comorbidities using hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals, the study found that GLP use was associated with a statistically significant reduction in all measured IC categories compared with non-GLP users. Semaglutide and tirzepatide showed the largest individual reductions. Limitations include the retrospective, observational design — which cannot establish causation — along with potential residual confounding, database coding inaccuracies, and inability to control for medication adherence or surgical technique variability.

Dermatologic surgery : official publication for American Society for Dermatologic Surgery [et al.] · May 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

Switching patterns of GLP-1 receptor agonists from 2018 to 2025 in the largest private healthcare network in Poland.

This retrospective observational study analyzed GLP-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA) prescription records from the LUX MED private healthcare network in Poland between 2018 and 2025. Among 42,423 patients with more than one prescription, the study characterized how frequently patients switched between GLP-1 RA agents and identified factors associated with switching. The primary analysis used a discrete-time hazard model at the prescription-transition level, with subcutaneous semaglutide as the reference comparator. The study found that nearly 30% of patients switched agents at least once, and over 14% switched two or more times. After adjusting for switching opportunity and calendar time, liraglutide was associated with substantially lower odds of switching compared to subcutaneous semaglutide, while oral semaglutide and dulaglutide did not differ significantly. Temporal analyses revealed episodic peaks in switching and accelerating uptake of tirzepatide following its market entry. Key limitations include the retrospective, observational design; the lack of data on reasons for switching (e.g., tolerability, cost, availability); restriction to a single private-sector network; and the inability to establish causality. The authors characterize findings as hypothesis-generating.

Acta diabetologica · May 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

Semaglutide

This report examines the transfer of semaglutide into human breast milk in mothers using subcutaneous (injectable) semaglutide. The study found that semaglutide was undetectable in the breast milk of mothers receiving the drug via subcutaneous injection, and breastfed infants whose mothers used this route did not experience adverse effects. The report also highlights an important safety consideration regarding oral formulations of semaglutide (e.g., Rybelsus): these contain the absorption enhancer salcaprozate sodium (SNAC), which may be transferred into breast milk and potentially accumulate in nursing infants, raising concerns about the oral route during lactation. The report concludes that only injectable forms of semaglutide appear to be appropriate for use during breastfeeding based on currently available data. Limitations include the likely small number of mother-infant pairs studied and the observational nature of the data, which precludes definitive causal conclusions. Long-term infant outcomes were not assessed.

Unknown journal · May 2026Source ↗
Limited · humanPreprint

Endogenous Incretin Secretagogue Compositions as a Mechanistic Class Versus Pharmacological Incretin Receptor Agonists for Weight Reduction in Overweight Adults: A Real-World Observational Cohort Analysis of a Nutraceutical Composition (Trimsulin) and Comparison with Published Outcomes for Semaglutide and Tirzepatide

This observational cohort analysis describes weight-loss outcomes and adverse event rates in 503 overweight adults who completed six months of the "Trimsulin Weight Loss Program," a nutraceutical regimen combining two proprietary products (a powdered drink mix and a capsule) with a structured diet and exercise protocol. The authors compare their results descriptively — without inferential statistics — to published real-world data for the prescription GLP-1 receptor agonist semaglutide and the dual GIP/GLP-1 agonist tirzepatide. The study reports that Trimsulin participants experienced mean weight reductions of 7.3% at 3 months and 14.1% at 6 months, numerically exceeding the comparator figures drawn from a separate published cohort. Adverse events were self-reported by 4.8% of Trimsulin participants versus much higher rates cited for the pharmacological comparators. Key limitations are substantial: there is no randomization, no placebo or active control arm, no blinding, no direct head-to-head comparison, reliance on self-reported adverse events, a highly selected completer-only analysis (503 of 1,000+ enrollees), differing baseline BMI profiles across cohorts, and the absence of any inferential statistical testing. The program's dietary and behavioral components cannot be disentangled from any supplement effect. The authors acknowledge the need for randomized controlled trials. The paper is identified as a preprint.

Unknown journal · May 2026DOI ↗