Dramatic weight loss with a diabetes drug; may help migraines and other neurological problems
Weight loss in overweight migraine sufferers – including that produced by bariatric surgery – leads to a reduction in the frequency of migraine attacks. In a previous post and in my new book I mentioned the use of metformin, a diabetes drug that helps weight loss, in migraine patients.
A study published in the February 10 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine definitively confirmed that weekly injections of another diabetes drug, semaglutide (Ozempic) can lead to an average of 15% weight loss in obese individuals. Seventy percent of participants lost at least 10% of weight. This was a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial that included 1,961 participants. Individuals in both the placebo and the active group were counseled every four weeks to encourage maintenance of a reduced calory diet and increased physical activity. Semaglutide is very similar to dulaglutide (Trulicity).
Other drugs that are used for weight loss produce an average of 4% to 6% weight loss and tend to have more side effects. Nausea and diarrhea were the most common adverse events with semaglutide. They were typically transient and mild-to-moderate in severity and subsided with time. Only 4.5% of participants on semaglutide stopped taking the drug due to side effects.
Obesity is a risk factor not only for diabetes and increased frequency of migraines but also strokes, idiopathic intracranial hypertension (pseudotumor cerebri), obstructive sleep apnea, hypertension, and others.
This trial should lead to the FDA approval of semaglutide for weight loss in obese individuals without diabetes. Hopefully, the FDA approval will compel insurance companies to pay for it. The out-of-pocket cost of 4 pen-like syringes is $735.
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