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Ozempic-like weight loss jabs ‘slash booze cravings and curb binge drinking by 40%’

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WEIGHT loss jabs slash alcohol cravings and can curb dangerous binge drinking, new research suggests. 

The active drug semaglutide, found in Ozempic and Wegovy, cuts the amount people drink in one day by around 40 per cent, the first study of its kind found.

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Weight loss jabs have already shown promise for heart attacks, snoring and fertilityCredit: OZEMPIC

The 'wonder’ injectables also dramatically reduced a person's desire for booze - and smokers taking part puffed less.

It adds to a growing body of evidence that so-called ‘skinny jabs’ may have benefits beyond slimming down or controlling diabetes.

Previous studies have suggested they lower the risk of heart attack or stroke in overweight adults, as well as help to treat snoring, reverse heart failure symptoms, boost fertility and ward off Alzheimer’s

Senior author Klara Klein said: “These data suggest the potential of semaglutide and similar drugs to fill an unmet need for the treatment of alcohol use disorder.

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“Larger and longer studies in broader populations are needed to fully understand the safety and efficacy in people with alcohol use disorder, but these initial findings are promising.”

Scientists at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine followed 48 people with problem drinking who had not been actively seeking treatment. 

They all had alcohol use disorder, which can include the inability to stop or control drinking despite negative consequences.

On day one, participants were asked to enjoy their preferred alcoholic drinks over two hours, with instructions to delay drinking if they wished.

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They were then randomly assigned to receive weekly, low-dose injections of semaglutide or a placebo for nine weeks, during which time their weekly boozing patterns were measured.

The semaglutide dose was 0.25mg per week for four weeks, 0.5mg per week for four weeks, and 1mg for one week, all given during clinic visits.

Julia Hartley-Brewer slams government plan for NHS to offer free 'fat jabs' to tackle obesity crisis

Researchers found that semaglutide injections reduced the number of drinks participants consumed on each of their drinking days by 41 per cent, and weekly cravings dropped by 40 per cent. 

Nearly 40 per cent of people in the semaglutide group reported no heavy drinking days in the last month of treatment, compared to 20 per cent in the placebo group.

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Among those who also smoked cigarettes, patients treated with semaglutide reported smoking less than the placebo group. 

Dr Riccardo De Giorgi, clinical lecturer at the University of Oxford, who was not involved in the study, said: "There has been much sensation (and even more noise) about drugs such as semaglutide in the medical field, especially regarding mental health.

"However, their potential use as a mechanistically novel treatment for addiction is perhaps one of the most promising research avenues."

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The new study, published in the journal JAMA Psychiatry, comes after UK figures last week showed deaths from alcohol have reached a record high.

Some 10,473 were registered in the UK in 2023 which were the direct consequence of alcohol, such as alcoholic liver disease.

This was four per cent higher than the year before.

Professor Sir Ian Gilmore, chairman of the Alcohol Health Alliance UK, said: “We welcome any new research developments to help people with alcohol use disorders.

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“While the evidence on the efficacy of these new drugs remains limited, we have decades of robust research showing how to help people with alcohol problems and prevent alcohol harm more broadly by tackling the affordability, availability and marketing of alcohol.

“We continue to urge the Government to fulfil their promise to focus on prevention, which will always be better, and cheaper, than a cure.

“Further research on the drug's mechanism of action might also help to grow our understanding of the cause of alcohol dependence, which blights the lives of so many people, their families and their communities.”

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