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During Global GLP-1 Shortage, Doctors Prioritize Certain Patients


 

Glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists are the latest blockbuster drugs — thanks to their potent ability to help patients lose weight. But ongoing shortages expected to last until the end of this year combined with increasing demand have raised ethical questions about who deserves access to the drugs.

Semaglutide for weight loss (Wegovy) has launched in eight countries, namely, Denmark, Germany, Iceland, Norway, the United Arab Emirates, the United Kingdom, the United States, and Switzerland, and was released in Japan in February. Semaglutide for type 2 diabetes (Ozempic) is approved in 82 countries and often is prescribed off-label to treat obesity.

The dual glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide/GLP-1 agonist tirzepatide — sold as Mounjaro for type 2 diabetes — started rolling out in 2022. It’s approved for chronic weight management in the European Union and the United Kingdom, sold in the United States as the weight loss drug Zepbound, and is currently under review in China.

As shortages continue, some governments are asking clinicians not to prescribe the drugs for obesity and instead reserve them for people with type 2 diabetes. But governments are limited in how to enforce this request, and some providers disagree with the guidance. Here’s a look at various countries’ approaches to handling these blockbuster drugs.

Sweden

Ylva Trolle Lagerros, MD, said it’s common for the Swedish Medicines Agency to post guidance for drugs on their website, and occasionally, the agency will send letters to physicians if a drug is recalled or found to have new side effects. In December, Dr. Lagerros, along with physicians throughout Sweden, received a letter at her home address requesting that they not prescribe GLP-1 receptor agonists to people for weight loss alone, over concerns the drugs wouldn’t be available for patients with type 2 diabetes.

Given the shortages, Dr. Lagerros, an obesity medicine specialist and associate professor at the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm, Sweden, expected the guidance but said it was reinforced with the letters mailed to physicians’ homes.

“It’s not forbidden to go off-label. It is a right you have as a physician, but we are clearly told not to,” said Dr. Lagerros, who is also a senior physician at the Center for Obesity in Stockholm, Sweden’s largest obesity clinic.

Providers are being forced to prioritize some patients above others, she added.

“Yes, GLP-1 [agonists] are good for people with type 2 diabetes, but given this global shortage, I think the people who are most severely sick should be prioritized,” she said. “With this principle, we are walking away from that, saying only people with type 2 diabetes should get it.”

Dr. Lagerros said she does not prescribe Ozempic, the only injectable GLP-1 currently available in Sweden, off-label because she works closely with the government on national obesity guidelines and feels unable to, but she understands why some of her colleagues at other clinics do.

In Sweden, some companies are importing and selling Wegovy, which is typically not available, at different price points, said Dr. Lagerros. She said she knows of at least three telehealth apps operating in Sweden through which patients are prescribed semaglutide for weight loss without being seen by a doctor.

“That adds to the ethical problem that if you prescribe it as a diabetes medication, the patient doesn’t have to pay, but if you prescribe it as an obesity medication, the patient has to pay a lot of money,” Dr. Lagerros said.

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