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Weight maintenance after discontinuation of GLP-1 therapies.

Moiz A, Filion KB, Knäuper B, Tsoukas MA, Brazeau AS, Zolotarova T, Lelièvre A, Eisenberg MJ.
EClinicalMedicine · May 28, 2026
Plain-language summary

This review examines what happens to body weight after patients stop taking glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) and newer dual/triple co-agonists used for obesity treatment. The authors note that these medications can produce mean weight losses of 10–30%, far exceeding what is typically achievable through lifestyle changes alone. However, the review highlights that real-world data suggest up to 65% of patients discontinue GLP-1 RAs within one year of starting treatment, and randomized controlled trial data indicate that approximately two-thirds of lost weight is regained within a year of stopping the medication. The review explores the physiological, behavioral, and environmental mechanisms that drive this weight regain once pharmacological appetite suppression is removed. The authors conclude that sustaining weight loss after discontinuation will require integrated, patient-centered approaches that combine ongoing lifestyle interventions, behavioral support, and system-level strategies. As a review article, it synthesizes existing evidence but does not generate new primary data, and its conclusions are limited by the quality and scope of the studies it draws upon.

Why this grade: This is a narrative review synthesizing existing RCT and real-world data rather than generating new primary evidence, so it is graded as "review" rather than a standalone human trial.

Ask the literature about GLP-1
Abstract

Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) and dual/triple co-agonists have revolutionized obesity treatment, producing mean weight losses of 10-30% that were rarely achievable with lifestyle modification or earlier medications. Yet, once GLP-1 therapy is discontinued, most patients experience rapid weight regain, often accompanied by reversal of cardiometabolic improvements. Real-world data show that up to 65% of users discontinue GLP-1 RAs within a year of initiation, and randomized controlled trials demonstrate that two-thirds of lost weight is typically regained within a year of discontinuation. Weight regain following GLP-1 RA discontinuation reflects a powerful interplay of physiological, behavioral, and environmental factors that promote relapse once pharmacological appetite suppression is removed. Sustaining weight loss after GLP-1 RA discontinuation will ultimately depend on integrated, patient-centered frameworks combining ongoing lifestyle, behavioral, and system-level supports.

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