Could obesity drugs help with alcohol cravings? New study suggests
potential
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[February 13, 2025]
By CARLA K. JOHNSON
Medications that have transformed the treatment of obesity may also help
people drink less alcohol, according to new government-funded research.
The study was small — just 48 adults — and lasted just over two months,
so it’s not the final word. Experts say it’s not yet clear how safe
these drugs are for people who don’t need to lose weight.
But the results add to evidence from animal studies and reports that
people are finding drugs like Ozempic and Wegovy helpful to manage
cravings, not just for food, but also for tobacco and alcohol.
Scientists are studying these drugs in smokers, people with opioid
addiction and cocaine users.
“This is such promising data. And we need more of it,” said study
co-author Dr. Klara Klein, of the University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill, who treats patients with diabetes and obesity. “We frequently will
hear that once people start these medications that their desire to drink
is very reduced, if not completely abolished."
The drugs, known as GLP-1 receptor agonists, work by mimicking hormones
in the gut and the brain to regulate appetite and feelings of fullness.
The new study looked at one of these drugs, semaglutide, which is the
drug in Ozempic and Wegovy.
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The research, published Wednesday in the journal JAMA Psychiatry, was
funded by the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, part
of the National Institutes of Health.
There are already three medications approved to treat alcohol use
disorder, so until larger studies can confirm the findings, people
should talk to their doctor about what's already available, said lead
author Christian Hendershot, an addiction researcher at University of
Southern California.
For the new study, researchers recruited people who reported symptoms of
alcohol use disorder, such as difficulty controlling their drinking, but
weren’t actively seeking treatment for it.
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A woman holds up a dosage of Wegovy, a drug used for weight loss, at
her home in Front Royal, Va., on March 1, 2024. (AP Photo/Amanda
Andrade-Rhoades, File)
 First, each person came to a lab
where they were served their favorite alcoholic beverage and could
drink as much as they wanted over two hours.
Then, researchers randomly assigned half the people to get a weekly
injection of semaglutide. The other half got sham injections.
For nine weeks, everyone kept track of their drinking habits and
their desire for alcohol. A lab visit with their favorite alcohol
was repeated at the end of the study.
During the last weeks of the study, nearly 40% in the semaglutide
group reported no heavy drinking days compared with 20% in the
placebo group. And in the final lab test, the semaglutide group
drank roughly half the amount, on average, compared to those who got
the placebo.
Everyone in the study was overweight. It's unclear how safe the
drugs would be for a person of normal weight, Klein said.
Smokers in the study who got the semaglutide also cut back on
cigarettes, noted Luba Yammine of UTHealth Houston, who is leading
other research on GLP-1 drugs for people who want to quit smoking.
The finding is promising but more data is needed, Yammine said.
The study “provides additional important information on the
potential role of this new class of medications” in treating certain
addictions, said Dr. Lorenzo Leggio, an NIH researcher who is
leading a 20-week trial of semaglutide for alcohol use disorder now
underway in Baltimore.
“It is important to keep in mind that we need larger randomized
clinical trials to confirm these findings,” Leggio said.
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