GLP-1 Medications: A Complete Guide

Summary: A working reference for GLP-1 receptor agonists. We cover what each medication does, what the trials actually showed, what the side effects look like in practice, and what it costs to get treatment. Every claim links to a primary source.

This content is for informational purposes only and is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting, changing, or stopping any medication.

GLP-1 receptor agonists are the most consequential change in metabolic medicine in a generation. In about a decade they have moved from a niche second-line diabetes drug to one of the most widely prescribed medications in the United States. Semaglutide and tirzepatide produce double-digit body weight reductions in clinical trials, drop A1c by two percentage points or more in type 2 diabetes, and reduce major cardiovascular events in people with established disease. They also slow gastric emptying enough to cause real nausea, cost north of a thousand dollars a month at brand pricing, and carry warnings that matter.

This site exists to make those tradeoffs legible. Each article anchors to FDA prescribing information, trial papers in journals like the New England Journal of Medicine and JAMA, and recognized clinical references. When something is genuinely uncertain, including long-term safety beyond five years and how durably weight loss holds after stopping, we say so.

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Cost, access, and the compounded question

Living with a GLP-1

Other medications and reference

How we write

Every article anchors to primary sources. Numbers come from trial papers, doses from FDA labels, warnings from the FDA's safety communications. Where the evidence is mixed or thin, we name what is uncertain instead of papering over it. The full editorial standards are on the About page, and our commercial relationships are on the Disclaimer page.