GLP-1 agonists in addiction therapy – review
Table of Contents
- GLP-1 Receptor Agonists for Substance Use Disorders: What the Evidence Actually Shows
- Abstract
- Study at a Glance
- Study Snapshot: Key Statistics
- Full Study Facts
- What the Researchers Actually Did
- Key Findings: Primary Outcomes
- Key Findings: Secondary Outcomes and Subgroup Analyses
- Adverse Events and Safety Profile
- Statistical Approach and Rigor
- Clinical Takeaway
- Why This Matters Clinically
- Read This Paper Through Nine Different Lenses
- What are GLP-1 receptor agonists?
- How do GLP-1RAs work in addiction treatment?
- What studies have been conducted on GLP-1RAs in addiction?
- What are the key findings for alcohol use disorder?
- How effective is exenatide for nicotine addiction?
- What about stimulant use disorders?
- Are GLP-1RAs safe to use in addiction treatment?
- What are the potential limitations of using GLP-1RAs for addiction?
- Are there any real-world applications of these findings?
- What future research is needed?
- Read next
GLP-1 Receptor Agonists for Substance Use Disorders: What the Evidence Actually Shows
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- How semaglutide and exenatide performed in clinical trials targeting alcohol and nicotine use disorders
- What the safety and tolerability data actually show across nine qualifying studies
- Why the evidence for stimulant use disorders remains thin and what that means for clinical practice
- What neurobiological mechanisms drive the hypothesis, and where those mechanisms may produce treatment plateaus or rebound after discontinuation
TL;DR: A nine-study qualitative review finds that semaglutide and exenatide produce statistically significant reductions in alcohol self-administration, craving, and nicotine use, but the evidence base is small, predominantly Western, and not yet sufficient to support routine clinical adoption.
Abstract
Substance use disorders (SUDs) represent a major global public health challenge, and currently available pharmacological treatments remain only moderately effective. Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs), widely used in the treatment of obesity and type 2 diabetes, have recently attracted attention as potential therapeutic agents in addiction medicine due to their effects on reward-related neural pathways. The aim of this review was to evaluate the efficacy and safety of GLP-1RAs in adults with substance use disorders. A total of nine studies met the inclusion criteria and were included in the qualitative analysis. The available evidence suggests that semaglutide and exenatide may reduce alcohol consumption, decrease craving, and support the maintenance of nicotine abstinence, while also contributing to weight control. In contrast, clinical data regarding stimulant use disorders remain limited. Across the analysed studies, GLP-1RAs demonstrated a favourable safety profile. The most commonly reported adverse effects were mild gastrointestinal symptoms, and no significant neuropsychiatric safety concerns were identified. Overall, GLP-1RAs may represent a promising adjunctive approach in the treatment of substance use disorders. However, potential plateau effects and rebound phenomena after treatment discontinuation suggest that long-term therapeutic strategies may be required. Further large-scale randomized clinical trials are needed to confirm these findings and to determine the optimal role of GLP-1RAs in addiction treatment.
Citation: Gwałt P, Musioł A, Nowakowski M, Rakuś M, Marzec J, Łukasz K. GLP-1 agonists in addiction therapy: review. Biul Gł Bibl Lek. 2026;386:5-16.
License: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0
Study at a Glance
| Design | PRISMA-guided qualitative systematic review |
| Population | Adults with substance use disorders (alcohol, nicotine, stimulant) |
| Studies Included | 9 (4 original RCTs, 4 secondary/post-hoc RCT analyses, 1 large EHR cohort) |
| Agents Evaluated | Semaglutide, exenatide, dulaglutide, liraglutide (referenced) |
| Primary Question | Efficacy and safety of GLP-1RAs in adults with SUD |
| Key Finding | Semaglutide and exenatide reduced alcohol consumption, craving, and cigarette use; stimulant data remain insufficient; GI adverse events were mild and transient |
Study Snapshot: Key Statistics
| Domain | Agent / Study | Key Result | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alcohol self-administration | Semaglutide (Phase II RCT, 9 weeks) | Significant reduction in g-ETOH and peak BrAC | p=0.01; p=0.03 |
| Alcohol craving (PACS) | Semaglutide | Significant reduction in Penn Alcohol Craving Scale score | p=0.01 |
| Heavy drinking days | Exenatide ER (26-week RCT) | Reduction as adjunct to standard of care | Reported significant |
| Phosphatidylethanol (PEth) | Exenatide ER (post-hoc) | Significant reduction in direct alcohol biomarker | Reported significant |
| AUD risk (real-world) | Semaglutide (TriNetX cohort) | Lower risk of incident AUD and AUD recurrence | Significant |
| AUD risk (meta-analysis) | GLP-1RAs (obesity/T2DM populations) | 28% reduction in AUD diagnosis risk vs. other interventions | Significant |
| Nicotine abstinence | Exenatide + NRT (pilot RCT) | Enhanced biologically verified 7-day abstinence at week 6; reduced post-cessation weight gain | Reported significant |
| Daily cigarette use | Semaglutide (AUD trial, secondary) | Reduction in daily cigarette consumption | p=0.005 |
| Cocaine self-administration | Exenatide single-dose crossover (n=13) | Reduced cocaine infusions selected; reduced subjective euphoria ratings | Reported significant |
Full Study Facts
| Authors | Gwałt P, Musioł A, Nowakowski M, Rakuś M, Marzec J, Łukasz K |
| Journal | Biuletyn Głównej Biblioteki Lekarskiej (Biul Gł Bibl Lek) |
| Year | 2026 |
| DOI | 10.2478/bgbl-2026-0001 |
| Study Design | PRISMA-guided systematic review (qualitative synthesis only; no meta-analysis performed) |
| Databases Searched | PubMed/MEDLINE, Scopus, Web of Science; search through March 3, 2026 |
| Studies Included (n) | 9 total: 4 original RCTs, 4 secondary/post-hoc RCT analyses, 1 EHR cohort |
| Population | Adults with formally diagnosed or clinically evident SUD (AUD, NUD, CUD) |
| Interventions | Semaglutide, exenatide (ER and single-dose), dulaglutide, liraglutide |
| Primary Endpoint | Efficacy (consumption, craving, abstinence rates) and safety of GLP-1RAs in SUD |
| Key Results | Semaglutide reduced g-ETOH (p=0.01), BrAC (p=0.03), PACS craving (p=0.01); exenatide reduced heavy drinking days, PEth biomarker, and nicotine abstinence failure; semaglutide reduced daily cigarette use (p=0.005); 28% reduction in AUD risk in observational meta-analysis |
| Adverse Events | Mild, transient gastrointestinal symptoms (nausea, less frequently emesis); no treatment-induced major depressive disorder or suicidal ideation identified |
| Risk of Bias Assessment | Cochrane RoB 2 (RCTs); ROBINS-I (observational studies); most studies rated moderate risk, primarily due to attrition and residual confounding |
| Funding | Not reported |
| Conflict of Interest | Authors declare no conflicts of interest |
What the Researchers Actually Did
Gwałt and colleagues conducted a PRISMA-compliant systematic review of published clinical evidence evaluating GLP-1 receptor agonists in adults with substance use disorders. They searched PubMed/MEDLINE, Scopus, and Web of Science through March 3, 2026, supplementing automated retrieval with manual reference screening of identified systematic reviews and meta-analyses. Eligibility was structured around the PICOS framework: included studies required pharmacological administration of a GLP-1RA or dual agonist, adult participants with problematic substance use or a formal SUD diagnosis, and direct empirical measurement of addiction-relevant outcomes, such as consumption quantity, validated craving scores, days of abstinence, fMRI cue-reactivity, or addiction-related hospitalization rates. Preclinical studies, non-SUD obesity/diabetes trials without addiction-specific endpoints, and publications evaluating only endogenous GLP-1 changes were excluded. Six investigators independently conducted study selection. Risk of bias was assessed with Cochrane RoB 2 for RCTs and ROBINS-I for observational studies.
Nine studies met inclusion criteria: four original RCTs, four secondary or post-hoc analyses of existing RCT data, and one large retrospective cohort using the TriNetX electronic health record database. Because design heterogeneity precluded meta-analytic pooling, the authors conducted a qualitative synthesis organized by substance category: alcohol use disorder (AUD), nicotine use disorder (NUD), and stimulant use disorder (StUD). The review did not perform a formal GRADE assessment of the overall evidence, though it noted that most RCTs carried a moderate risk of bias driven primarily by participant attrition, and the observational study was limited by residual confounding inherent to retrospective analyses.
Key Findings: Primary Outcomes
- Alcohol self-administration (semaglutide): In a Phase II RCT enrolling adults with moderate AUD over nine weeks, semaglutide produced a statistically significant reduction in laboratory-based alcohol self-administration (g-ETOH, p=0.01) and in peak breath alcohol concentration (peak BrAC, p=0.03).
- Alcohol craving (semaglutide): The same trial reported a significant attenuation of alcohol cravings on the Penn Alcohol Craving Scale (PACS, p=0.01).
- Heavy drinking days (exenatide ER): A 26-week RCT of extended-release exenatide as adjunctive therapy to standard of care demonstrated a reduction in heavy drinking days.
- Phosphatidylethanol (exenatide ER, post-hoc): A secondary analysis of the exenatide RCT cohort found significant reductions in blood PEth concentrations, a direct biomarker of alcohol consumption, alongside favourable shifts in pro-inflammatory and metabolic marker profiles.
- AUD risk (real-world cohort): A retrospective TriNetX database analysis found that patients prescribed semaglutide had a significantly lower risk of both incident AUD diagnoses and AUD recurrence.
- AUD risk (meta-analysis cited in review): A meta-analysis of observational studies found that GLP-1RA use in patients with obesity and type 2 diabetes was associated with a statistically significant 28% reduction in the risk of an AUD diagnosis compared to other therapeutic interventions.
Key Findings: Secondary Outcomes and Subgroup Analyses
Nicotine Use Disorder
- Abstinence rates: A pilot double-blind RCT integrating once-weekly exenatide into a regimen of nicotine replacement patches and behavioural counselling significantly enhanced biologically verified 7-day abstinence rates at week 6, and reduced post-cessation weight gain.
- Treatment response predictors: A secondary analysis of that trial identified heterogeneous therapeutic response to exenatide, moderated by baseline body mass index, depressive symptomatology, and CHRNA5 receptor genotype, suggesting that personalized treatment selection may be feasible.
- Long-term cardiovascular safety (dulaglutide): A 52-week follow-up of patients receiving dulaglutide alongside varenicline identified no cardiovascular safety signals, specifically regarding systolic blood pressure reductions, among participants maintaining abstinence.
- Cross-substance effect: Participants receiving semaglutide in the AUD trial demonstrated a significant reduction in daily cigarette consumption (p=0.005), suggesting that anti-addictive effects may extend across substance classes simultaneously.
Stimulant Use Disorder
- Cocaine (exenatide, crossover, n=13): Individuals with cocaine use disorder who received a single dose of exenatide three hours before a testing session showed a measurable reduction in subjective ratings of euphoria and drug-seeking intent, translating into a significant decrease in cocaine infusions selected during an operant self-administration paradigm. This represents the sole clinical data point for stimulant use disorders in this review.
Opioid Use Disorder (referenced in discussion)
- The review’s discussion cites a systematic review of EHRs indicating that semaglutide initiation significantly reduced intoxication episodes and the risk of fatal overdose in patients with opioid use disorders; however, no original OUD study was included among the nine qualifying studies.
Adverse Events and Safety Profile
Across all nine appraised studies, the administration of GLP-1RAs in patients with SUD was characterized by a consistently favourable tolerability profile. The most frequently reported adverse events were gastrointestinal, primarily manifesting as mild nausea and, less frequently, emesis. These symptoms were typically transient and resolved during the initial titration phase.
No significant neuropsychiatric adverse events were identified. Specifically, no evidence of treatment-induced major depressive disorder or suicidal ideation was detected across the analysed studies. The authors frame the absence of neuropsychiatric signal as particularly clinically meaningful, given the high prevalence of comorbid psychiatric conditions in the SUD population, where such signals would constitute a substantial barrier to adoption.
One cautionary finding: the 52-week dulaglutide follow-up in smokers found that participants maintaining abstinence showed a significant increase in systolic blood pressure after dulaglutide discontinuation at week 52, which the authors interpret as consistent with a post-discontinuation rebound phenomenon rather than a direct drug toxicity signal.
Statistical Approach and Rigor
This review is a qualitative synthesis only. No pooled effect sizes, weighted means, or meta-analytic calculations were performed by the review authors. Risk of bias was formally assessed using Cochrane RoB 2 for RCTs and ROBINS-I for observational studies, with most studies rated at moderate risk of bias due to attrition (RCTs) or residual confounding (observational data). No formal GRADE evidence quality assessment was conducted. The inclusion of four secondary or post-hoc analyses derived from the same underlying RCT datasets introduces the possibility that shared-sample findings are overrepresented in the evidence base. The smallest study informing conclusions about stimulant use disorders enrolled only 13 participants, a sample size that affords negligible statistical power for subgroup inference. The review’s reliance on individual study p-values rather than pooled effect estimates limits quantitative precision and precludes dose-response inference.
Clinical Takeaway
For the clinician managing patients with alcohol or nicotine use disorders who are already on or being considered for GLP-1 receptor agonist therapy, this review provides a coherent, if preliminary, signal: semaglutide and exenatide show statistically significant reductions in alcohol consumption, craving, and nicotine relapse across multiple study designs. The safety profile is reassuring, with no neuropsychiatric signals, which distinguishes GLP-1RAs from agents such as varenicline that carry labeling warnings in certain populations. However, the evidence does not yet support prescribing GLP-1RAs as primary addiction pharmacotherapy, and the possibility of rebound phenomena after discontinuation argues against time-limited courses. Clinicians should treat these data as hypothesis-strengthening rather than practice-defining, and patients with comorbid metabolic disease and SUD represent the most defensible population in whom adjunctive use might be considered off-label today.
Clinical Bottom Line: Semaglutide and exenatide reduce alcohol self-administration and craving in randomized trials, but nine studies of heterogeneous design, predominantly at moderate risk of bias, do not constitute sufficient evidence to add GLP-1RAs to addiction treatment guidelines.
Why This Matters Clinically
Substance use disorders impose a staggering global burden, and the current pharmacological toolkit is limited in both breadth and effectiveness. Naltrexone for AUD and varenicline for NUD represent the standard, yet real-world adherence to both agents is persistently suboptimal, driven in part by adverse event profiles. GLP-1 receptor agonists occupy an unusual pharmacological niche: they are already approved, widely prescribed, and carry a well-characterized safety record from metabolic indications. If their apparent anti-addictive effects are confirmed at scale, the clinical benefit would be additive for patients who carry the common clinical phenotype of comorbid obesity, type 2 diabetes, and substance use disorder. The dual metabolic and addiction-modifying profile described in this review would address two high-mortality comorbidities with a single agent class, reducing polypharmacy burden and potentially improving overall adherence. That said, clinicians must resist the narrative compression that often follows promising early-phase data in addiction medicine.
Read This Paper Through Nine Different Lenses
The same evidence can produce very different conclusions depending on the question being asked. Explore this study through multiple physician-guided interpretive frameworks.
Overview
GLP-1 receptor agonists, such as semaglutide and exenatide, show promise in reducing alcohol consumption, decreasing cravings, and supporting nicotine abstinence. These medications may offer a new approach to addiction treatment by affecting reward-related neural pathways.
However, the evidence base is small and predominantly Western, with limited data on stimulant use disorders. Future research is needed to confirm these findings and determine the optimal role of GLP-1RAs in clinical practice.
- GLP-1RAs reduce alcohol self-administration and craving.
- Exenatide enhances nicotine abstinence when combined with NRT.
- Stimulant use disorder data are insufficient for definitive conclusions.
Patient Takeaway
For patients with substance use disorders, GLP-1 receptor agonists like semaglutide and exenatide may offer new hope by reducing alcohol consumption, decreasing cravings, and supporting nicotine abstinence. These medications have a favorable safety profile, with mild gastrointestinal symptoms being the most commonly reported adverse effects.
However, more research is needed to understand their long-term effectiveness and potential for use in treating stimulant use disorders.
- GLP-1RAs reduce alcohol self-administration and craving.
- Exenatide enhances nicotine abstinence when combined with NRT.
- Safety profile includes mild gastrointestinal symptoms.
Clinician’s POV
Clinicians can consider GLP-1 receptor agonists as a potential adjunctive treatment for alcohol and nicotine use disorders. These medications have shown efficacy in reducing alcohol consumption, decreasing cravings, and supporting nicotine abstinence.
However, the evidence base is small and predominantly Western, with limited data on stimulant use disorders. Clinicians should monitor patients for gastrointestinal symptoms and consider long-term therapeutic strategies to avoid potential rebound effects.
- GLP-1RAs reduce alcohol self-administration and craving.
- Exenatide enhances nicotine abstinence when combined with NRT.
- Safety profile includes mild gastrointestinal symptoms.
A Skeptical Read
While GLP-1 receptor agonists show promise in reducing alcohol consumption and cravings, as well as supporting nicotine abstinence, the evidence base is small and predominantly Western. The limited data on stimulant use disorders raise questions about their broader applicability.
Clinicians should approach these medications with caution, considering the potential for plateau effects and rebound phenomena after treatment discontinuation. Further research is needed to confirm their efficacy and determine optimal clinical use.
- GLP-1RAs reduce alcohol self-administration and craving.
- Exenatide enhances nicotine abstinence when combined with NRT.
- Limited data on stimulant use disorders.
Study Critic
Critics may question the efficacy and applicability of GLP-1 receptor agonists in treating substance use disorders due to the small, predominantly Western evidence base. The limited data on stimulant use disorders further complicate their clinical utility.
Additionally, potential plateau effects and rebound phenomena after treatment discontinuation raise concerns about long-term effectiveness. Critics argue that more research is needed to confirm these findings and determine the optimal role of GLP-1RAs in addiction treatment.
- GLP-1RAs reduce alcohol self-administration and craving.
- Exenatide enhances nicotine abstinence when combined with NRT.
- Limited data on stimulant use disorders.
Compared to Past Research
The use of GLP-1 receptor agonists in addiction treatment is a relatively new area of research. Previous studies focused primarily on their effects in obesity and type 2 diabetes, where they demonstrated efficacy in weight management.
Recent interest in their potential for treating substance use disorders stems from their impact on reward-related neural pathways, which may offer new therapeutic approaches to reducing cravings and consumption.
- GLP-1RAs previously studied in obesity and type 2 diabetes.
- Interest in addiction treatment due to effects on reward pathways.
- New area of research with evolving evidence base.
Practical Considerations
In practical terms, GLP-1 receptor agonists can be considered as an adjunctive therapy for alcohol and nicotine use disorders. They have shown efficacy in reducing alcohol consumption, decreasing cravings, and supporting nicotine abstinence.
Clinicians should monitor patients for gastrointestinal symptoms and consider long-term therapeutic strategies to avoid potential rebound effects. Real-world applications may include combining GLP-1RAs with existing treatments like behavioral counseling and nicotine replacement therapy.
- GLP-1RAs reduce alcohol self-administration and craving.
- Exenatide enhances nicotine abstinence when combined with NRT.
- Monitor for gastrointestinal symptoms.
Future Directions
The future of GLP-1 receptor agonists in addiction treatment looks promising but requires further research. Larger-scale randomized clinical trials are needed to confirm their efficacy and determine the optimal role in clinical practice.
Emerging trends include exploring the use of GLP-1RAs for stimulant use disorders and investigating long-term therapeutic strategies to avoid potential rebound effects.
- GLP-1RAs show promise but need more research.
- Future studies should explore stimulant use disorders.
- Investigate long-term therapeutic strategies.
Misreadings & Bad-Faith Takes
Common misreadings of the evidence include overestimating the efficacy of GLP-1 receptor agonists in treating stimulant use disorders, which is currently unsupported by data. Another misconception is that these medications are a standalone treatment for addiction.
GLP-1RAs should be considered as adjunctive therapies and combined with existing treatments like behavioral counseling and nicotine replacement therapy. Clinicians should also monitor patients for gastrointestinal symptoms and consider long-term therapeutic strategies to avoid potential rebound effects.
- Misunderstanding of efficacy in stimulant use disorders.
- GLP-1RAs are not standalone treatments.
- Monitor for gastrointestinal symptoms.
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What are GLP-1 receptor agonists?
GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs) are medications that mimic the effects of glucagon-like peptide-1, a hormone involved in regulating metabolism and appetite.
How do GLP-1RAs work in addiction treatment?
GLP-1RAs may reduce alcohol consumption, decrease craving, and support nicotine abstinence by affecting reward-related neural pathways.
What studies have been conducted on GLP-1RAs in addiction?
Nine studies were included in the review, with four original RCTs, four secondary/post-hoc analyses, and one large EHR cohort.
What are the key findings for alcohol use disorder?
Semaglutide reduced laboratory-based alcohol self-administration and peak breath alcohol concentration. Exenatide also showed reductions in heavy drinking days.
How effective is exenatide for nicotine addiction?
A pilot RCT found that exenatide enhanced 7-day abstinence rates at week 6 when combined with nicotine replacement therapy and behavioral counseling.
What about stimulant use disorders?
The evidence for stimulant use disorders is limited, with only one study showing a reduction in cocaine infusions selected during an operant self-administration paradigm.
Are GLP-1RAs safe to use in addiction treatment?
The safety profile of GLP-1RAs is favorable, with mild gastrointestinal symptoms being the most commonly reported adverse effects.
What are the potential limitations of using GLP-1RAs for addiction?
Potential plateau effects and rebound phenomena after treatment discontinuation suggest that long-term therapeutic strategies may be required.
Are there any real-world applications of these findings?
A retrospective TriNetX database analysis found that patients prescribed semaglutide had a significantly lower risk of incident AUD diagnoses and AUD recurrence.
What future research is needed?
Larger-scale randomized clinical trials are needed to confirm these findings and determine the optimal role of GLP-1RAs in addiction treatment.


