Even with access to blockbuster obesity drugs, some people don't lose
weight
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[November 25, 2024]
By JONEL ALECCIA
Unlike scores of people who scrambled for the blockbuster drugs Ozempic
and Wegovy to lose weight in recent years, Danielle Griffin had no
trouble getting them.
The 38-year-old information technology worker from New Mexico had a
prescription. Her pharmacy had the drugs in stock. And her health
insurance covered all but $25 to $50 of the monthly cost.
For Griffin, the hardest part of using the new drugs wasn’t access. It
was finding out that the much-hyped medications didn’t really work for
her.
“I have been on Wegovy for a year and a half and have only lost 13
pounds,” said Griffin, who watches her diet, drinks plenty of water and
exercises regularly. “I’ve done everything right with no success. It’s
discouraging.”
In clinical trials, most participants taking Wegovy or Mounjaro to treat
obesity lost an average of 15% to 22% of their body weight — up to 50
pounds or more in many cases. But roughly 10% to 15% of patients in
those trials were “nonresponders” who lost less than 5% of their body
weight.
Now that millions of people have used the drugs, several obesity experts
told The Associated Press that perhaps 20% of patients — as many as 1 in
5 — may not respond well to the medications. It's a little-known
consequence of the obesity drug boom, according to doctors who caution
eager patients not to expect one-size-fits-all results.
“It's all about explaining that different people have different
responses,” said Dr. Fatima Cody Stanford, an obesity expert at
Massachusetts General Hospital
The drugs are known as GLP-1 receptor agonists because they mimic a
hormone in the body known as glucagon-like peptide 1. Genetics, hormones
and variability in how the brain regulates energy can all influence
weight — and a person's response to the drugs, Stanford said. Medical
conditions such as sleep apnea can prevent weight loss, as can certain
common medications, such as antidepressants, steroids and
contraceptives.
“This is a disease that stems from the brain,” said Stanford. “The
dysfunction may not be the same” from patient to patient.
Despite such cautions, patients are often upset when they start getting
the weekly injections but the numbers on the scale barely budge.
“It can be devastating,” said Dr. Katherine Saunders, an obesity expert
at Weill Cornell Medicine and co-founder of the obesity treatment
company FlyteHealth. “With such high expectations, there’s so much room
for disappointment.”
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Donna Cooper holds up a dosage of Wegovy, a drug used for weight
loss, at her home, March 1, 2024, in Front Royal, Va. (AP
Photo/Amanda Andrade-Rhoades, File)
That was the case for Griffin, who
has battled obesity since childhood and hoped to shed 70 pounds
using Wegovy. The drug helped reduce her appetite and lowered her
risk of diabetes, but she saw little change in weight.
“It’s an emotional roller coaster,” she said. “You want it to work
like it does for everybody else.”
The medications are typically prescribed along with eating behavior
and lifestyle changes.
It’s usually clear within weeks whether someone will respond to the
drugs, said Dr. Jody Dushay, an endocrine specialist at Beth Israel
Deaconess Medical Center. Weight loss typically begins right away
and continues as the dosage increases.
For some patients, that just doesn't happen. For others, side
effects such as nausea, vomiting and diarrhea force them to halt the
medications, Dushay said. In such situations, patients who were
counting on the new drugs to pare pounds may think they’re out of
options.
“I tell them: It's not game over,” Dushay said.
Trying a different version of the new class of drugs may help.
Griffin, who didn't respond well to Wegovy, has started using
Zepbound, which targets an additional hormone pathway in the body.
After three months of using the drug, she has lost 7 pounds.
“I'm hoping it's slow and steady,” she said.
Other people respond well to older drugs, the experts said. Changing
diet, exercise, sleep and stress habits can also have profound
effects. Figuring out what works typically requires a doctor trained
to treat obesity, Saunders noted.
“Obesity is such a complex disease that really needs to be treated
very comprehensively,” she said. “If what we’re prescribing doesn’t
work, we always have a backup plan.”
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