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Is There a Risk for Semaglutide Misuse? Focus on the Food and Drug Administration's FDA Adverse Events Reporting System (FAERS) Pharmacovigilance Dataset.

Pharmaceuticals (Basel) · 2023

Last updated 2026-05-28

Between 2018 and 2022, the FDA received 31,542 reports of side effects for GLP-1 drugs, with semaglutide accounting for 26.1% of those reports. Compared to other GLP-1 drugs, semaglutide had higher reporting rates for terms like 'drug abuse' (4.05 times higher), 'drug withdrawal syndrome' (4.05 times higher), 'prescription drug used without a prescription' (3.60 times higher), and 'intentional product use issue' (1.80 times higher). No significant differences were found when comparing semaglutide to the phentermine-topiramate weight-loss combination.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalPharmaceuticals (Basel), 2023
Citations54
Relative citation ratio8.41
NIH percentile97
Molecules semaglutide
Conditions studied Opioid Use Disorder, Alcohol Use Disorder

Abstract

Recent media reports commented about a possible issue of the misuse of antidiabetics related to molecules promoted as a weight-loss treatment in non-obese people. We evaluated here available pharmacovigilance misuse/abuse signals related to , a glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) analogue, in comparison to other GLP-1 receptor agonists (, , , , , and ) and the - combination. To acheieve that aim, we analyzed the Food and Drug Administration's FDA Adverse Events Reporting System (FAERS) dataset, performing a descriptive analysis of adverse event reports (AERs) and calculating related pharmacovigilance measures, including the reporting odds ratio (ROR) and the proportional reporting ratio (PRR). During January 2018-December 2022, a total of 31,542 AERs involving the selected molecules were submitted to FAERS; most involved dulaglutide (n = 11,858; 37.6%) and semaglutide (n = 8249; 26.1%). In comparing semaglutide vs. the remaining molecules, the respective PRR values of the AERs 'drug abuse', 'drug withdrawal syndrome', 'prescription drug used without a prescription', and 'intentional product use issue' were 4.05, 4.05, 3.60, and 1.80 (all < 0.01). The same comparisons of semaglutide vs. the phentermine-topiramate combination were not associated with any significant differences. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first study documenting the misuse/abuse potential of semaglutide in comparison with other GLP1 analogues and the phentermine-topiramate combination. The current findings will need to be confirmed by further empirical investigations to fully understand the safety profile of those molecules.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 37513906 ↗

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