Skip to main content
Perspective

Critically Appraised Topic: Weight Gain Following Discontinuation Of Semaglutide In Nondiabetic Patients

Author : Natalia Halpern ( University of Michigan)

  • Critically Appraised Topic: Weight Gain Following Discontinuation Of Semaglutide In Nondiabetic Patients

    Perspective

    Critically Appraised Topic: Weight Gain Following Discontinuation Of Semaglutide In Nondiabetic Patients

    Author :

Keywords: weight loss , semaglutide , weight gain , cessation

Clinical Question

Should weight gain be expected following cessation of semaglutide treatment in obese, nondiabetic patients?

Patient/Population: (n=1961) Nondiabetic and BMI ≥ 30 or BMI ≥ 27 & ≥ 1 weight-related comorbidities

Intervention: Lifestyle interventions + Semaglutide 2.4 mg SQ once weekly for 68 weeks (including 16 weeks of dose escalation) followed by an additional year of monitoring following discontinuation of semaglutide and lifestyle interventions.

Comparison: Lifestyle interventions + Placebo SQ injections for 68 weeks followed by an additional year of monitoring following discontinuation of lifestyle interventions and placebo injections.

Outcome: Weight gain, cardiometabolic variables (blood pressure, cholesterol, CRP, HgbA1C)

Type of study: Randomized Control Trial

Evidence Summary

As Wilding et al have reported,1 from weeks 0–68, mean weight loss was 17.3% (SD 9.3%) in the treatment group and 2% (SD 6.1%) in the control group. One year following treatment cessation, patients in the treatment group regained 11.6% (SD 7.7) of their original body weight resulting in a net loss of 5.6% (SD 8.9%) and the control group had a net loss of 0.1% (SD: 5.8%) of original body weight. Cardiometabolic metrics including blood pressure, cholesterol levels, and HgbA1C were shown to improve during weeks 0–68 in the treatment group but reverted towards baseline at week 120 for most variables.

Clinical Bottom Line

The literature describes semaglutide as an effective treatment option for weight loss in nondiabetic patients which was further demonstrated by the results of this study. In addition to weight loss, improvements in cardiometabolic markers also improve with concurrent semaglutide and lifestyle modifications. However, these improvements seem to largely be erased at one-year following cessation. Patients should be counseled that weight gain is to be expected following discontinuation of semaglutide and shared-decision making should be employed when deciding to discontinue or maintain semaglutide use.

Conflicts of interest

None of the authors has any conflicts of interest to disclose.

References

1. Wilding JPH, Batterham RL, Davies M, et al. Weight regain and cardiometabolic effects after withdrawal of semaglutide: The STEP 1 trial extension. Diabetes Obes Metab. 2022; 24(8):1553–1564. doi: http://doi.org/10.1111/dom.14725.

22 Views

10 Downloads

Published on
29 Aug 2025
Peer Reviewed

Publication details

  • Article Number: 11

Jump to

Editor Request

  • None

File Checksums (MD5)

  • PDF: 60479f28a104b6fda345530e700d2087
  • XML: a51d8e5c366165eb1e2d09fdbb419c81