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ForumsPsychological & BehavioralQuality of life improvements on GLP-1 — 6 month update

Quality of life improvements on GLP-1 — 6 month update

sophie_paris Wed, Dec 31, 2025 at 7:00 AM 22 replies 1,028 viewsPage 1 of 5
sophie_paris
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Dec 31, 2025 at 8:25 AM#1

Quality of life improvements on GLP-1 — 6 month update

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

Background: Quality of life improvements on GLP-1 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.
— sophie_paris | Posted in Psychological & Behavioral
44 24SallyK_inj, CryptoCarl, MariaRD and 41 others
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julia.endo
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Dec 31, 2025 at 8:42 AM#2

Clinical perspective on Quality of life improvements on GLP-1 6:

I have managed roughly 300 patients on GLP-1 therapy and this topic comes up frequently. What the data shows — and what I see in practice — is that the medication works best as part of a comprehensive approach.

For this specific question, I would recommend: getting comprehensive baseline labs first.

Last edited: Dec 31, 2025 at 2:42 PM
14 22mark_tokyo, hans_munich, jason_sac26 and 11 others
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Dr.ReproEndo
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Dec 31, 2025 at 8:59 AM#3
julia.endo said:
What the data shows — and what I see in practice — is that the medication works best as part of a co

This is exactly right. julia.endo articulated what I have been trying to explain to my doctor for months. The Quality of life aspect is the most important factor.

9 7Dr.EndoEP, GraceAZ_72, carl_compliance and 6 others
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wendy_avl
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Dec 31, 2025 at 9:16 AM#4

Relevant to Quality of life improvements — here is my latest bloodwork comparison:

Key improvements: A1C 8.4% → 5.5%, triglycerides 197 → 97 mg/dL, hsCRP 8.0 → 0.9 mg/L. All on tirzepatide for 13 months.

The inflammatory marker drop is what impresses me most. Consistent with the SELECT trial's cardiovascular findings.

Last edited: Dec 31, 2025 at 3:16 PM
36 2PharmHunterJen, TomTeleRx, DoseLogDan and 33 others
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PharmHunterJen
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Dec 31, 2025 at 9:33 AM#5
julia.endo said:
What the data shows — and what I see in practice — is that the medication works best as part of a co

I respect julia.endo perspective but I think this oversimplifies things a bit. Re: Quality of life improvements — the effect size varies considerably by population.

I am not saying julia.endo wrong entirely — just that the picture is more nuanced than a blanket statement. The SUSTAIN data specifically shows different outcomes in different metabolic phenotypes.

17 6mike_mealprep, NicoleRaleigh, james_edin and 14 others
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