
Will Wider Use of GLP-1s Mean Fewer Pills for Older Adults? Yale Study Offers a Reality Check
Key Takeaways:
- Yale researchers found that roughly 15% of polypharmacy cases in adults aged 65 and older – about 3.3 million of 22 million – are attributable to obesity.
- GLP-1 medications are unlikely to meaningfully reduce overall prescription burden in this age group, and their side effects may add further medications.
- From July, eligible Medicare beneficiaries will gain broad access to GLP-1s for obesity treatment under a federally funded demonstration programme running until December 2027.
Rethinking the promise of GLP-1s in geriatric care
As people grow older, they tend to accumulate chronic conditions, many of which require ongoing pharmacological management. While prescription medications play an essential role in disease control, polypharmacy – generally defined as the regular use of five or more drugs – carries a heightened risk of adverse effects, drug–drug interactions, and contraindications. With glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1s) now reshaping obesity care, an open question has emerged: could effectively treating obesity in older adults reduce the number of medications they need overall?
A new study from Yale, published in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, sets out to answer that question by quantifying how much polypharmacy in adults aged 65 and older can be attributed to obesity in the first place.
The theory being tested
The investigators were motivated by a hypothesis that has gained traction in recent years: that better treatment of obesity could cascade into reduced reliance on medications for obesity-related complications such as type 2 diabetes, hypertension, and dyslipidaemia.
“Some in the medical community have theorized that if older adults are treated with GLPs, they can be on fewer medications because we’re treating their obesity and thereby treating other obesity-related conditions,” says Alissa Chen, MD, MPH, instructor of medicine (general medicine) and first author of the study.
To test the assumption, the team examined the extent to which polypharmacy in adults aged 65 and older could be statistically attributed to obesity.
What the study found
The researchers determined that approximately 15% of polypharmacy cases in this population were attributable to obesity. In absolute terms, this represented around 3.3 million of an estimated 22 million cases.
“While that is a lot of patients, there’s certainly a large majority of polypharmacy cases which are not attributable to obesity,” Chen adds.
The implication is significant. Even if GLP-1 therapy proves highly effective at treating obesity and its complications in older adults, the broader medication burden in this age group is driven largely by factors unrelated to body weight. As a result, GLP-1s are unlikely to substantially reduce the total number of prescriptions taken by people aged 65 and over, although they may still meaningfully improve obesity-related health outcomes.
A crossroads for obesity medications in older adults
Research into the use of obesity medications in older adults remains limited, and the long-term implications of widespread GLP-1 prescribing in this population are not yet well understood.
“We’re at a crossroads for the use of obesity medications like GLPs in older adults. This study gives us a first glimpse into one way in which GLPs may change the face of health and healthcare for older adults,” says Alexandra M. Hajduk, PhD, MPH, research scientist (geriatrics) and senior author of the study.
Chen also points out that the side-effect profile of GLP-1 therapy is itself worth considering when projecting medication burden. Common adverse effects, including nausea, acid reflux, and diarrhoea, may prompt the addition of over-the-counter or prescription remedies, potentially offsetting any reductions in other classes of medication.
Expanded medicare access from july
The clinical context is changing rapidly. Starting in July, obesity medications will become available at low cost for eligible Medicare beneficiaries under a federally funded demonstration programme running until December 2027. For the first time, GLP-1 medications will be broadly covered by Medicare for the treatment of obesity.
This expansion is widely expected to drive a surge in GLP-1 prescriptions among older adults. What happens after the demonstration period ends, however, is uncertain. If prices rise sharply once the programme concludes, many people may face the prospect of either paying out of pocket or stopping treatment altogether.
The risks of discontinuation
Stopping GLP-1 therapy is not a neutral event, particularly for older adults whose metabolic health may have improved markedly on treatment.
“Discontinuing can lead to worsened insulin resistance, and gaining more fat tissue than had been lost,” Chen says. “This may be dangerous, with some patients ending up in a worse situation after stopping than they were before starting.”
This raises difficult clinical and policy questions about how to ensure continuity of care once the demonstration programme concludes, and how to counsel older adults about the long-term commitment that GLP-1 therapy may represent.
The continuing role of medical reconciliation and deprescribing
The findings reinforce the importance of established tools for managing medication burden in older adults, rather than relying on a single new drug class to resolve polypharmacy.
“The tried-and-true methods for polypharmacy are medical reconciliation and rational deprescribing,” says Chen. “Many of these approaches, developed by and publicized by the National Institutes of Health-funded U.S. Deprescribing Research Network, are effective tools for geriatricians and primary care doctors.”
The researchers conclude that medication burden must remain front of mind when treating older adults, and that further research is needed to clarify how obesity medications affect health outcomes specifically in this age group.
Additional authors on the study include Ashwin Chetty, John Batsis, MD, and Kasia Lipska, MD, MHS.
Source: Yale School of Medicine




