Peptide News Digest

#Glp-1-Discontinuation

2 stories

Research · View digest

Boston University ENDO 2026 (Sontha): 60,000-Patient Claims Analysis Shows 40% of T2D Patients Stop GLP-1 Within 12 Months, 41.5% Restart Within a Year — Tirzepatide Users 41% Less Likely to Discontinue Than Liraglutide

An analysis of 60,000+ Americans with type 2 diabetes, presented at ENDO 2026 by Sainikhil Sontha (Boston University School of Public Health) and published in the Endocrine Society press release stream, found that 40% of GLP-1 users discontinued the medication within 12 months and roughly 60% had stopped by the end of two years. Among those who stopped, 41.5% restarted within a year and 58% within two years. Discontinuation was higher among Medicaid/Medicare beneficiaries, Black patients, and patients with documented nausea or GI side effects (37% of stoppers). Newer-generation tirzepatide users were 41% less likely to discontinue than liraglutide users, and patients whose first GLP-1 was prescribed by an endocrinologist were 10% less likely to stop. The data complement the Cleveland Clinic 8,000-patient real-world finding (March) and the eClinicalMedicine Budini meta-regression on weight-regain trajectory, sharpening the picture of how GLP-1 therapy churn actually unfolds in US insurance-claims populations.

Clinical Trials · View digest

Fractyl Health REMAIN-1 Midpoint Cohort Data: Revita Duodenal Mucosal Resurfacing Cuts Post-Tirzepatide Weight Regain by 40% — Accepted for DDW 2026

Fractyl Health's REMAIN-1 study — the first blinded, randomized, sham-controlled trial of an endoscopic 'gut reset' procedure — was accepted for presentation at DDW 2026. In 45 adults who had lost ≥15% body weight on tirzepatide and then discontinued, 29 received Revita duodenal mucosal resurfacing and 16 had a sham procedure. At 6 months post-discontinuation, Revita-treated patients regained 4.5% vs 7.5% for sham (P=0.07) — a 40% lower weight regain. Patients with more tissue resurfaced maintained >80% of pre-discontinuation weight loss. Topline pivotal-cohort data expected Q4 2026.