Obesity Care

GLP-1s Work, But Not for Free

Real-world semaglutide (Wegovy) patients might be experiencing a healthcare cost paradox, after a recent analysis in JAMA showed that GLP-1s successfully reduce weight and improve cardiovascular risk factors, but lead to increased patient healthcare expenditures in the short term.

  • Semaglutide is a GLP-1 receptor agonist approved for weight management and CV risk reduction, with established cardiovascular benefits in clinical trials like STEP 1.
  • The drug has shown dramatic trial results, but real-world cost-effectiveness data has been limited until now.

The real-world analysis examined 23.5k adults prescribed semaglutide between January 2018 and January 2025 across two large U.S. health systems and found over a 13-24 month follow-up that…

  • Patients achieved meaningful clinical benefits including 3.8% average weight reduction, 1.5 mmHg diastolic BP decrease, and 12.8 mg/dL total cholesterol reduction.
  • However, total monthly healthcare expenditures (excluding drug costs) increased by $80 per patient, with inpatient costs driving approximately half the increase.
  • The cost increase was consistent across diabetic ($67/month) and non-diabetic ($81/month) populations.

Even with proven clinical efficacy, the findings reveal a disconnect between immediate clinical benefits and short-term healthcare economics, raising questions about how long GLP-1s take to become cost-effective.

  • The increase suggests more hospital visits for cardiometabolic conditions may be driving higher expenditures after medication initiation.
  • Real-world weight loss (5% in non-diabetics) was also less dramatic than trial results (nearly 15% in STEP 1), likely due to shorter treatment duration (6-7 months on average).

Given the complexity of real-world GLP-1 use, multiple factors may be influencing the cost-effectiveness equation beyond the medication’s direct clinical effects.

  • Drug shortages, coverage changes, and co-pays may contribute to discontinuation patterns that affect long-term cost outcomes.
  • Additional healthcare utilization may also come from insurance-mandated follow-up visits, dose adjustments, and increased monitoring.
  • The analysis also couldn’t measure how early discontinuation impacts expenditures.

The Takeaway

For a while people have said, “GLP1s are expensive, but they will pay for themselves by reducing downstream healthcare costs.” They probably meant fewer heart attacks and delayed/avoiding chronic diseases (diabetes, HF, etc) and those things might still be true in the long run, but this study does not support that theory within months 13-24.

Get twice-weekly insights on the biggest stories shaping cardiology.

You might also like

Electrophysiology August 21, 2025

Conduction-System Pacing Succeeds at Treating AV Block August 21, 2025

Conduction-system pacing could be poised to reshape standard care for atrioventricular (AV) block patients after the randomized CSPACE trial demonstrated its significant benefits over traditional right ventricular septal pacing. Taking a closer look at CSP’s potential, the CSPACE trial enrolled 202 patients with AV block at two Australian hospitals, randomizing them to conduction-system pacing or […]

Cardiology Pharmaceuticals August 18, 2025

Rivaroxaban Monotherapy Could Be Better for CAD + AFib August 18, 2025

New analysis from the AFIRE trial suggests rivaroxaban monotherapy might be emerging as a preferred antithrombotic strategy for patients with AFib and stable coronary artery disease, especially in older age groups. The Post Hoc AFIRE Analysis examined 2,215 Japanese patients with AFib and stable CAD, stratifying them into four age groups (<70, 70-74, 75-79, and […]

Surgeries & Interventions August 14, 2025

TEER Could Save Lives in AFMR Patients August 14, 2025

Shedding light on a new treatment for an understudied condition, data published in EHJ suggests that transcatheter edge-to-edge repair (TEER) delivers significant survival advantages in patients with atrial functional mitral regurgitation (FMR). The new OCEAN-Mitral/REVEAL-AFMR Analysis compared 441 TEER-treated patients against 640 medically managed controls with moderate or severe atrial FMR, stating a solid case […]

Like the website? You'll love the newsletter

Completely free. Every Monday and Thursday.

CW Phone Square

You might also like..

Select All

You're signed up!

It's great to have you as a reader. Check your inbox for a welcome email.

-- The Cardiac Wire Team

You're all set!