People who stayed on a 7.2 milligram weekly dose of semaglutide lost around 20% of their body weight over 72 weeks.
Semaglutide, a medication originally designed to treat type 2 diabetes, has recently gained significant attention as a weight loss treatment. It has shown remarkable results in reducing body weight, making it a popular choice for those struggling with obesity or overweight.
Novo Nordisk said on Friday a late-stage trial with a high-dose version of the active ingredient semaglutide, used in its blockbuster obesity drug Wegovy, helped overweight patients lower their weight by 20.
In one corner, we’ve got Mounjaro, and in the other, Ozempic. They’re both once-a-week injectable drugs designed to help patients with type 2 diabetes manage blood sugar.
Semaglutide (known by its brand name Ozempic) has gained widespread attention for its weight-loss benefits, but is officially approved for managing type 2 diabetes. While there is currently limited data on its risks and benefits for those with type 1 diabetes,
In other news, Novo Nordisk announced the results from its phase 3b STEP UP semaglutide trial today. Specifically, the company said semaglutide 7.2 milligram (mg) injections over a 72-week period resulted in an average weight loss of 20.7%, better than the 17.5% weight loss achieved in a prior trial of semaglutide 2.4 mg injections.
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Semaglutide combined with automated insulin delivery enhances glucose control in type 1 diabetes, lowering insulin requirements and aiding weight management.
Novo Nordisk said on Friday a late-stage trial with a high-dose version of its weight loss drug semaglutide helped overweight patients lower their weight by 20.7%. The trial was testing a 7.2 milligram dose of the drug,
A trial exploring the use of a higher dose of Novo Nordisk's GLP-1 agonist semaglutide has shown that patients with obesity who were taking the drug were able to shed more than a fifth of their body weight.
EXPERTS have warned over hundreds rushed to hospital after using weight loss jabs – as half a million Brits now use the injections. Nearly 400 users have been hospitalised with serious,