Everyday Health: How effective is Zepbound for weight loss, and how does it work?
Fatima Cody Stanford: It acts on two hormones in the body, GLP-1 and GIP. The GLP-1 portion works on influencing a portion of your brain that tells you to eat less and store less fat. The reason it’s so potent is that it upregulates the portion of your brain that tells you to eat less and downregulates the portion of your brain that tells you to eat more. Then GIP works on improving how storage of fat happens so your body doesn’t want to store as much fat.
EH: How does Zepbound compare to Wegovy? Are there some patients who might be a better fit for one of these drugs over the other?
FCS: I think a lot of the choice may have to do with what’s covered by insurance. It will also come down to what the patient needs in terms of weight loss. If the patient needs a higher degree of weight loss or a higher degree of improvement in blood sugar then they may need Zepbound. If they don’t need something as strong, then they may take Wegovy instead.
EH: How much will Zepbound actually cost patients, and will insurance cover it?
FCS: It’s an expensive drug. Many people will pay I think between $500 and $1,000 even with insurance if their plan doesn’t cover the drug. And if they try a discount program like GoodRx, it might get down to $450 or so, but that’s still very pricey. Some people who have excellent private health insurance that covers the drug will likely pay about $30 for Zepbound.
EH: What do we know about side effects for Zepbound, and how do these compare with Wegovy?
FCS: Overall the safety of these drugs is very similar. What’s interesting is that so far I’m not seeing as many issues with common side effects with tirzepatide. In fact, I’ve had some patients who didn’t tolerate semaglutide because the nausea was too intense or they didn’t tolerate abdominal pain or constipation; they switched to tirzepatide and were able to tolerate it.
EH: Can people be on Zepbound for life?
FCS: Yes. That’s a one-word answer!
EH: Can Zepbound be combined with other weight loss medicines?
FCS: You can absolutely combine this with other medicines as long as they’re a different category of medicine that works in a different way. I have many patients who take other drugs like metformin or phentermine for weight loss in addition to tirzepatide. Most clinicians may not have the knowledge to do this. When I look in my own clinic at my patients who are the highest responders in terms of weight loss, it’s not one agent, it’s several. I have one patient I’ve been seeing for 11 years and who has been with our clinic for 15 years, and she has lost 60.7 percent of her total weight. She did weight loss surgery, and has been on several different medications in addition to surgery to get to that amount of weight loss over a 15-year period.
EH: Do you think drugs like Zepbound make weight loss surgery obsolete?
FCS: No. The winners are really the patients who have surgery and then who are also on a GLP-1 drug like tirzepatide or semaglutide and other things, too. These are the people who are getting to 50 percent or more in total body weight lost.
EH: One criticism with the clinical trials for older weight loss drugs is that most of the participants were white. Has there been more diversity with medicines like Zepbound?
FCS: It’s a problem, definitely. In my clinic, around 40 percent of my patients are Black, and so far we haven’t seen a difference in response to GLP-1 drugs in terms of weight loss. We’re seeing really great overall outcomes for these patients. I would say that compared with five years ago, companies that are testing new drugs now are doing a better job with recruiting diverse participants in trials.
EH: What else should patients know about Zepbound?
FCS: The key thing is I just want people to be mindful that the medications are definitely a tool that I will continue to use. But they are just one tool. They are not by themselves going to solve our obesity problem.