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Weight loss drugs may curb alcohol use

Weight loss drugs may curb alcohol use

  • Weight loss medications like Ozempic and Wegovy may help reduce alcohol use by slowing down the absorption of alcohol into the bloodstream, which can lead to a slower increase in blood-alcohol content.
  • A study found that participants taking these medications reported feeling less intoxicated after consuming an alcoholic beverage compared to those not taking the medication.
  • The researchers suggest that this is because the GLP-1 agonists slow gastric emptying, leading to a delayed rise in blood alcohol levels and reducing the effects of alcohol on the brain.
  • More than half of US adults drink alcohol, and chronic alcohol use is associated with various health problems, including high blood pressure, cancer, and heart disease, making this potential therapy for reducing alcohol use particularly relevant.
  • The study provides early data to support larger trials testing whether GLP-1 drugs can be used as a therapy for people who want to reduce their alcohol use, offering new hope for individuals struggling with addiction.

A man sips brown liquor from a glass.

A new study found that after a cocktail, study participants taking medications for diabetes and weight loss saw delayed effects from alcohol.

There’s mounting evidence that popular drugs prescribed for diabetes management and weight loss—better known by trade names like Ozempic and Wegovy—could be effective in reducing alcohol use.

The pilot study in Scientific Reports found that these types of GLP-1 agonists slow the speed at which alcohol enters the bloodstream, which also slows the effects on the brain.

“People who drink know there’s a difference between nursing a glass of wine and downing a shot of whiskey,” says Alex DiFeliceantonio, assistant professor and interim co-director of Virginia Tech’s Fralin Biomedical Research Institute’s Center for Health Behaviors Research.

A standard serving of either has 0.6 ounces of alcohol, but the shot brings a rapid increase in blood-alcohol content. It feels different because of the way the body handles alcohol over time.

“Why would this matter? Faster-acting drugs have a higher abuse potential,” DiFeliceantonio says.

“They have a different impact on the brain. So if GLP-1s slow alcohol entering the bloodstream, they could reduce the effects of alcohol and help people drink less.”

More than half of US adults drink alcohol, and roughly one in 10 has alcohol use disorder. Long-term, chronic alcohol use is associated with health-related illnesses such as high blood pressure, cancer, and heart and liver disease. In January, US Surgeon General Vivek Murthy released an advisory highlighting alcohol use as the third leading preventable cause of cancer, after tobacco use and obesity.

Despite consuming similar doses of alcohol calculated to increase breath alcohol concentration to approximately 0.08%, concentration increased more slowly in participants taking semaglutide, tirzepatide, or liraglutide. Participants in that group also reported feeling less intoxicated on subjective measures.

The study sought to better understand the physical and subjective experience of alcohol traveling through the body of someone taking a GLP-1. The research provides early data to guide the design of larger, more rigorous studies testing whether GLP-1 drugs can help reduce alcohol use.

Twenty participants with a BMI of 30 or greater, half on a maintenance dose of GLP-1s and half taking no medication, were recruited from Roanoke and surrounding areas. They fasted before arriving for the study, then they were given a snack bar to standardize caloric intake and stomach contents.

Researchers gathered blood pressure, pulse, breath alcohol concentration, and blood glucose levels. Ninety minutes later, participants were served an alcoholic beverage that had to be consumed within 10 minutes. Researchers then measured breath alcohol and participants answered questions about cravings, appetite, alcohol effects, and taste. For example, they were asked to rate, on a scale of zero to 10, “How drunk do you feel right now?” This was repeated three times over 60 minutes.

The participants on GLP-1s consistently reported feeling less intoxicated.

Following the session, participants remained in a recovery room as the alcohol was metabolized. Breath alcohol was measured every 30 minutes, blood glucose was measured twice, and three hours after the session participants again answered subjective questions. After four hours, a breath alcohol content below .02 percent, and the study physician’s approval, the participant was OK’d to leave.

“Other medications designed to help reduce alcohol intake”—naltrexone and acamprosate—”act on the central nervous system,” says DiFeliceantonio, the study’s corresponding author. “Our preliminary data suggest that GLP-1s suppress intake through a different mechanism.”

The drugs slow gastric emptying, which can lead to a slower rise in blood alcohol.

The idea for the study initially bubbled up during a Fralin Biomedical Research Institute faculty retreat and was led by Warren Bickel, professor and director of the Addiction Recovery Research Center, who died in 2024.

It built on an analysis of social media posts on the community network Reddit, in which users reported reduced cravings for alcohol when taking drugs intended to treat Type 2 diabetes and obesity.

“His guidance shaped every stage of this research—from the initial idea to its final form—and his passion for scientific discovery continues to inspire me every day,” says Fatima Quddos, a graduate researcher in Bickel’s lab and the first author on both studies.

“Bickel’s work had long focused on what happens when you delay rewards, so we asked, ‘What if GLP-1s affect how the body handles alcohol?’” DiFeliceantonio says. “Ending this project was bittersweet, because it was my last collaboration with him.”

“He was always asking, ‘How do we help people the fastest?’ Using a drug that’s already shown to be safe to help people reduce drinking could be a way to get people help fast,” DiFeliceantonio says.

While this was a pilot study, the researchers say the findings showed clear differences between groups and provide early data that support larger trials testing the drugs as a therapy for people who want to reduce their alcohol use.

“As a recent graduate, I’m deeply inspired by the potential this research holds—not only for advancing our scientific understanding, but also for paving the way toward future therapies,” says Quddos, who earned her doctorate from Virginia Tech’s Translational Biology, Medicine, and Health Graduate Program in May.

“The possibility of offering new hope to individuals struggling with addiction is what makes this work so meaningful.”

Support for this work came from Virginia Tech’s Fralin Biomedical Research Institute.

Source: Virginia Tech

The post Weight loss drugs may curb alcohol use appeared first on Futurity.

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Q. Can weight loss drugs help reduce alcohol use?
A. Yes, according to a new study, medications for diabetes management and weight loss may slow the effects of alcohol in the body.

Q. How do these weight loss drugs affect alcohol consumption?
A. These GLP-1 agonists slow the speed at which alcohol enters the bloodstream, which also slows the effects on the brain.

Q. Why is it important to reduce the effects of alcohol?
A. Faster-acting drugs have a higher abuse potential, and reducing their effects can help prevent alcohol-related health problems such as high blood pressure, cancer, and heart and liver disease.

Q. How did the study participants react when given an alcoholic beverage while taking GLP-1s?
A. Participants on GLP-1s consistently reported feeling less intoxicated compared to those not taking the medication.

Q. What is the mechanism by which these weight loss drugs suppress alcohol intake?
A. The drugs slow gastric emptying, which can lead to a slower rise in blood alcohol levels.

Q. How did the researchers design this study?
A. The study was inspired by an analysis of social media posts on Reddit and built on Warren Bickel’s work on delayed rewards.

Q. What is the potential impact of these findings for future therapies?
A. The researchers believe that offering new hope to individuals struggling with addiction is what makes this work so meaningful, and that larger trials could test the drugs as a therapy for reducing alcohol use.

Q. Who led the study and what was their motivation?
A. Warren Bickel initially conceived the idea, which was later developed by Fatima Quddos, who is also the first author on both studies.

Q. What is the significance of this research in the context of US health policies?
A. The study provides early data to guide the design of larger, more rigorous studies testing whether GLP-1 drugs can help reduce alcohol use, which is a significant public health concern.

Q. How does the study’s finding align with existing treatments for reducing alcohol intake?
A. The researchers note that other medications like naltrexone and acamprosate act on the central nervous system, whereas these weight loss drugs suppress alcohol intake through a different mechanism.