Nov 7, 2025 at 7:55 PM#1
I keep seeing "tachyphylaxis" and "tolerance" used interchangeably in GLP-1RA discussions, and it's driving me crazy. These are distinct pharmacological phenomena with different mechanisms, timescales, and clinical implications. Let me clarify.
Tachyphylaxis = Rapid loss of response after repeated exposure, typically occurring over minutes to hours. Mechanism: receptor desensitization, depletion of signaling intermediates, or substrate depletion. Usually NOT reversible during continued treatment.
Tolerance = Gradual loss of response over days to weeks. Mechanism: homeostatic adaptations at the systems level (receptor downregulation, compensatory pathway activation, metabolic adaptation). May be partially reversible with dose escalation.
For GLP-1RAs, BOTH occur but affect different endpoints:
> "GLP-1 receptor agonism exhibits rapid tachyphylaxis of the gastric emptying delay (onset within days, plateauing by 2-4 weeks) while demonstrating sustained glucose-lowering and weight loss effects over years, suggesting that different physiological endpoints have distinct susceptibility to receptor desensitization."
> — Nauck et al., *Diabetes Care*, 2021; 44(3):740–753
So "tachyphylaxis" correctly describes the gastric emptying effect. "Tolerance" better describes the gradual attenuation of weight loss velocity. And some effects (HbA1c reduction, cardiovascular protection) show NEITHER — they're remarkably stable over years.
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