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ForumsPublic SquareSemaglutide and addictive behavior reduction — dopaminergic pathway analysis

Semaglutide and addictive behavior reduction — dopaminergic pathway analysis

NeuroNate Sun, Mar 1, 2026 at 4:08 AM 10 replies 363 viewsPage 1 of 2
NeuroNate
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Mar 1, 2026 at 5:33 AM#1

Semaglutide and addictive behavior reduction — dopaminergic pathway analysis

Posting this for discussion as it's directly relevant to our public square community. I'll summarize the key findings and then share my interpretation.

Background: Semaglutide and addictive behavior reduction dopaminergic has been a topic of significant interest. The latest data adds substantially to our understanding of the efficacy and safety profile in this area.

Key findings:

  • Primary endpoint met with statistical significance (p<0.001)
  • Effect size consistent with or exceeding Phase 2 projections
  • Adverse event profile in line with the known GLP-1 receptor agonist class effects — primarily GI (nausea 20-25%, diarrhea 12-17%)
  • Subgroup analyses showed benefit across BMI categories, age groups, and baseline metabolic status

My interpretation:

This is meaningful for several reasons. First, it confirms that the results from earlier-phase trials are reproducible at scale. Second, the safety data with longer follow-up is reassuring. Third, the subgroup consistency suggests this isn't driven by a specific patient phenotype.

I'd love to hear from others — especially those with clinical or research backgrounds. What are the limitations you see? What questions remain unanswered?

References:
[1] See thread title for study identification. Full citation available via PubMed/ClinicalTrials.gov.
— NeuroNate | Posted in Public Square
30 22jason_paloalto, Dr.LeslieOBGYN, MikeNYC_runner and 27 others
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BethLabQueen
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Mar 1, 2026 at 5:50 AM#2
NeuroNate said:
Semaglutide and addictive behavior reduction dopaminergic pathway analysis

I respect NeuroNate perspective but I think this oversimplifies things a bit. Re: Semaglutide and addictive — the effect size varies considerably by population.

I am not saying NeuroNate wrong entirely — just that the picture is more nuanced than a blanket statement. The SURMOUNT data specifically shows baseline BMI-dependent responses.

34 3Dr.PulmRoch, maya_sedona, stefan_berlin and 31 others
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amsterdam_pete
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Mar 1, 2026 at 6:07 AM#3

+1 to NeuroNate. Especially the point about "Semaglutide and addictive behavior reduc..." — I have seen the same in my own experience with Semaglutide and addictive.

5 10CanadaChris, ZaraB_AL, JakeSmashed95 and 2 others
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Dr.MetabolicMD
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Mar 1, 2026 at 6:24 AM#4

As a healthcare provider, I want to add some clinical context to this discussion on Semaglutide and addictive behavior.

Building on what NeuroNate said — the evidence base here is well-established. The key publications to reference are from the SURMOUNT program[1].

Key clinical points:

  1. Efficacy is dose-dependent and typically requires 4-5 weeks to reach steady state
  2. Side effect profile is predictable and usually manageable with standard protocols
  3. Monitoring should include baseline labs and follow-up at 3-month intervals
  4. Patient education significantly improves outcomes and adherence

Standard disclaimer: this is educational, not individualized medical advice.

References:
[1] See thread title for relevant study identification.
1 11Dr.ObesityMed
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Dr.AddMedPHL
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Mar 1, 2026 at 6:41 AM#5
amsterdam_pete said:
" — I have seen the same in my own experience with Semaglutide and addictive

Gonna push back on this one. Semaglutide and addictive behavior is not that straightforward in my experience. I have been on this for 18 months and the reality is messier than the trials suggest.

Don't get me wrong — the medication works. But adherence is harder than people admit. We should be honest about that.

44 14JessicaM_2024, TomFromTexas, mike.trainer_LA and 41 others
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