As of 2025, the obesity treatment landscape continues to evolve. Injectable GLP-1 receptor agonists have set new clinical benchmarks, achieving 15–20% average weight reduction and improving cardiometabolic outcomes in adults with obesity. Yet real-world use often lags, hampered by injection hesitancy, supply constraints, and insurance variability.
Emerging research suggests the next frontier may lie with oral GLP-1–based therapies. In phase 3 studies, these agents have delivered weight reductions of 14–15%, closely mirroring injectables. Meanwhile, early-phase data on dual and triple agonists targeting GLP-1, glucagon, and amylin pathways show promising results, with up to 24% reductions reported in select populations. Gastrointestinal effects remain the most common treatment-related events and are typically mild and transient.
As these therapies near clinical integration, clinicians must consider how oral options will complement current care models—aligning with behavioral interventions, supporting adherence, and broadening access. Framing obesity as a chronic, manageable disease remains key, with new therapies positioned as tools for long-term metabolic health.
Pharmacologic therapy—oral or injectable—should enhance, not replace, nutritional, behavioral, and physical activity strategies. As HCPs, your role is pivotal in ensuring optimal treatment pairing and fostering durable outcomes.
Which of your patients might be best suited for oral anti-obesity therapy once available? What strategies have been most effective in supporting adherence and tracking response over time?
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Sorin Herscovici, MANCHESTER VA MEDICAL CENTER2dMost likely when transitioning to maintenance chronic therapy as well as for patients who need to lose only 5-10 % of body weight -
Sachin Panchal6dThat’s great alternative for patients with phobia of needle and wants to use oral GLP
