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Perinatal Semaglutide Treatment Improves Maternal Health and Mitigates Offspring Metabolic Dysfunction in a Mouse Model of Maternal Obesity

Rajamoorthi A, Hollingsworth T, Guan Y, Pinney SE, Simmons RA.
Unknown journal · June 11, 2026
Plain-language summary

This mouse study investigated the effects of semaglutide, a GLP-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA), administered from preconception through lactation in dams fed either a high-fat diet (HFD) or a standard diet. Researchers assessed metabolic outcomes in both the treated mothers and their offspring, who were weaned onto a standard diet. The study found that semaglutide improved body composition and glucose metabolism in HFD-fed dams during pregnancy, and these benefits persisted approximately 10 weeks after weaning even after treatment was discontinued. Offspring born to HFD-fed, untreated dams showed impaired glucose homeostasis and hepatic steatosis (fatty liver) at 18 weeks of age. These metabolic disturbances were attenuated in offspring whose mothers received semaglutide. Notably, semaglutide treatment did not adversely affect conception rates or fetal viability. The authors conclude that GLP-1 RA therapy during the perinatal period may improve both maternal and offspring metabolic health in an obesity mouse model, and they call for further investigation into GLP-1–based therapies in this context. Key limitations include the exclusive use of a mouse model, limiting direct translation to human pregnancy, and the fact that this appears to be a preprint not yet formally peer-reviewed.

Why this grade: All experimental work was conducted in mice (no human participants), and the paper appears to be an unreviewed preprint, precluding any direct conclusions about efficacy or safety in humans.

Ask the literature about semaglutide
Abstract

Early-life exposures during critical periods of development significantly impact lifelong metabolic risk and likely contribute to the rising rates of obesity, type 2 diabetes, and metabolic dysfunction–associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) in children. Here, we evaluated the safety and metabolic effects of semaglutide, a GLP-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA), administered from preconception through lactation in dams fed a high-fat diet (HFD) or standard diet, and assessed metabolic outcomes in dams and their offspring. Offspring were weaned to a standard diet. We found that semaglutide improved body composition and glucose metabolism in HFD-fed dams during pregnancy. These maternal changes persisted 10 weeks after weaning despite discontinuation of semaglutide treatment. HFD exposure impaired glucose homeostasis and promoted hepatic steatosis in offspring at 18 weeks. These effects were ameliorated by maternal semaglutide treatment. Importantly, metabolic improvements in dams and offspring occurred without adverse effects on conception rate or fetal viability. These findings suggest that GLP-1 RA during the perinatal period can improve maternal and offspring metabolic health in a mouse model of obesity and support further investigation of GLP-1–based therapies to mitigate maternal metabolic dysfunction and improve metabolic risk in children.

Educational summary of published research — not medical advice. License: cc by. Full text is shown only where licensing permits.