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Approved Profile FDA Approved Semaglutide

Semaglutide

The peptide that reshaped obesity medicine.

Metabolic Health / Weight Loss/312+ studies cited/Subcutaneous / Oral
Educational Use Only

This content is for informational purposes and does not constitute medical advice. Clinical supervision is still required, but the evidence and regulatory context are materially stronger than research-only peptides.

Decision Summary

Start with the research signal and risk posture before you read the full protocol discussion.

What It Is

Semaglutide

Evidence Signal

3 indexed studies support the article, but the strength of evidence should be read from the cited data and context below.

Primary Caution

Use this page to separate approved use from broader mechanism and protocol discussion.

Half-Life

~7 days

Routes

Subcutaneous / Oral

Aliases

Ozempic, Wegovy, Rybelsus

Regulatory Posture

Backed by approved use and stronger late-stage evidence.

On this page

Overview

Semaglutide is a glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonist developed by Novo Nordisk. It is one of the most clinically significant peptide therapeutics of the 21st century β€” the molecule behind Ozempic (type 2 diabetes), Wegovy (obesity), and Rybelsus (oral formulation) β€” and has generated landmark cardiovascular outcomes data that fundamentally changed how physicians treat metabolic disease.

GLP-1 is an endogenous incretin hormone produced in the gut in response to food intake. Native GLP-1 has a half-life of only 1–2 minutes due to degradation by DPP-4 enzymes. Semaglutide is an engineered analog with a fatty acid side chain that binds to albumin, extending its half-life to approximately 7 days β€” enabling once-weekly subcutaneous dosing.

Mechanism of Action

Semaglutide activates GLP-1 receptors throughout the body, producing coordinated metabolic effects:

Pancreas: Stimulates glucose-dependent insulin secretion from beta cells; suppresses glucagon from alpha cells. Because stimulation is glucose-dependent, hypoglycemia risk is low in the absence of other hypoglycemic agents.

Gastric: Slows gastric emptying, prolonging satiety after meals and reducing post-prandial glucose excursions.

Brain: Acts on hypothalamic GLP-1 receptors to reduce appetite and food-seeking behavior. The SCALE trial data suggest semaglutide reduces cravings for high-calorie foods specifically.

Cardiovascular: GLP-1 receptors are present on cardiomyocytes and arterial endothelium. The SUSTAIN-6 and SELECT trials demonstrated direct cardioprotective effects independent of weight loss.

Liver: Reduces hepatic glucose output and appears to reduce hepatic fat accumulation (NAFLD/NASH signal in early trials).

Clinical Research & Evidence

Evidence Level: 🟒 EL1 β€” Multiple large RCTs, FDA approved across multiple indications

Key Trials:

TrialNDurationKey Finding
SUSTAIN-63,2972 years26% reduction in MACE vs. placebo in T2DM
STEP-11,96168 weeks14.9% mean weight loss vs. 2.4% placebo (Wegovy dose)
SELECT17,6045 years20% reduction in CV events in overweight/obese without diabetes
PIONEER-63,183~16 monthsNon-inferiority for CV safety; oral formulation
FLOW3,533~3.4 years24% reduction in kidney disease progression in T2DM

The SELECT trial (2023) was particularly landmark β€” demonstrating cardiovascular benefit in people with obesity but without diabetes, expanding the drug’s risk-reduction narrative beyond glucose control.

FDA-Approved Indications

  • Ozempic (0.5–2 mg/week SQ): Type 2 diabetes β€” glycemic control; reduce CV risk in T2DM with established CVD
  • Wegovy (2.4 mg/week SQ): Chronic weight management in adults with BMI β‰₯30, or β‰₯27 with weight-related comorbidity
  • Rybelsus (3–14 mg/day oral): Type 2 diabetes β€” glycemic control

Dosing Protocols (FDA-Approved)

Subcutaneous (Ozempic / Wegovy):

  • Start: 0.25 mg/week Γ— 4 weeks (tolerability phase)
  • Escalate monthly: 0.5 mg β†’ 1 mg β†’ 1.7 mg β†’ 2 mg (Ozempic) / 2.4 mg (Wegovy)
  • Inject in abdomen, thigh, or upper arm; rotate sites

Oral (Rybelsus):

  • Start: 3 mg/day Γ— 30 days
  • Escalate: 7 mg/day β†’ 14 mg/day
  • Take on empty stomach with ≀120 mL water; wait 30 min before eating

Side Effects & Contraindications

Common (>10%):

  • Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea β€” most common during dose escalation; typically transient
  • Constipation
  • Injection site reactions

Serious/Monitor:

  • Pancreatitis (rare; discontinue if suspected)
  • Thyroid C-cell tumors (observed in rodent studies β€” contraindicated in personal/family history of MTC or MEN2)
  • Gastroparesis-like symptoms with high doses
  • Hypoglycemia (mainly when combined with insulin/sulfonylureas)

Contraindications:

  • Personal/family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma (MTC) or MEN2
  • Prior serious hypersensitivity to semaglutide
  • Pregnancy (emerging data suggests fetal risk)
RegionStatus
United StatesFDA approved (Ozempic 2017, Rybelsus 2019, Wegovy 2021)
European UnionEMA approved (Ozempic 2018, Rybelsus 2020, Wegovy 2021)
UKMHRA approved
CanadaHealth Canada approved
AustraliaTGA approved

Compounding Note: Due to supply shortages, compounding pharmacies produced semaglutide from 2022–2024. The FDA declared the shortage resolved in 2024, after which compounded semaglutide is no longer permitted under 503A/503B except for specific documented shortage conditions.

Research Citations

  1. Marso SP, et al. Semaglutide and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes. N Engl J Med. 2016.
  2. Wilding JPH, et al. Once-Weekly Semaglutide in Adults with Overweight or Obesity. N Engl J Med. 2021.
  3. Lincoff AM, et al. Semaglutide and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Obesity without Diabetes. N Engl J Med. 2023 (SELECT).
  4. Husain M, et al. Oral Semaglutide and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes. N Engl J Med. 2019.
  5. Perkovic V, et al. Semaglutide and Kidney Outcomes in T2DM. N Engl J Med. 2024 (FLOW).

Clinical Research

3 studies
EL1SELECT2023·New England Journal of Medicine
N=17,604

Semaglutide and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Obesity without Diabetes (SELECT)

Lincoff AM, Brown-Frandsen K, Colhoun HM, et al.

Semaglutide 2.4 mg reduced the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events by 20% versus placebo in overweight or obese adults with estab...

EL1STEP-12021·New England Journal of Medicine
N=1,961

Once-Weekly Semaglutide in Adults with Overweight or Obesity (STEP-1)

Wilding JPH, Batterham RL, Calanna S, et al.

Semaglutide 2.4 mg once-weekly produced 14.9% mean body weight reduction versus 2.4% with placebo in adults with obesity without diabetes.

EL1SUSTAIN-62016·New England Journal of Medicine
N=3,297

Semaglutide and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes (SUSTAIN-6)

Marso SP, Bain SC, Consoli A, et al.

Once-weekly semaglutide reduced the rate of cardiovascular death, nonfatal MI, or nonfatal stroke by 26% versus placebo in patients with ...

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