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The New Daily
The New Daily
Health
John Elder

TGA restricts weight-loss drug to diabetics after TikTok blamed for shortage

The popularity of an epi-pen for overweight and obese people has led to shortages for people suffering from type 2 diabetes. Photo: Getty

In February 2021, The New Daily reported on a new drug labelled a “game changer” in the management of obesity – and for once, a large, gold-standard clinical trial backed up the hype.

A single weekly injection of the drug semaglutide, for 68 weeks, saw an average loss of 15 per cent body weight in trial participants.

More than a third of the participants who took the drug lost more than 20 per cent of their weight.

On the Australian scene, the drug was approved as a treatment for type 2 diabetes for patients who couldn’t tolerate or gained no benefit from the standard medication, metformin.

As we reported, some bariatric surgeons were using semaglutide to help patients lose enough weight to safely undergo surgery.

Big and interesting news, right? Then the story went quiet.

Now there’s a shortage

In Australia, semaglutide is marketed under the brand name Ozempic. The drug isn’t taken as a pill or liquid, but as an epi-pen for type 2 diabetics who need to lose weight and lower their blood sugar.

It’s often delivered in the abdomen or thigh.

Two weeks ago, the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA) quietly issued a statement, directed at GPs, urging them to stop prescribing the drug for obesity management.

The drug is such a hit with people desperate to lose weight that there’s now a shortage “significantly affecting people using Ozempic for its approved use of type 2 diabetes”.

The TGA statement, issued in collaboration with nine peak medical bodies, including the AMA, the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners and the Australian diabetes Society, advised:

“The increased demand is due to extensive prescribing for obesity management, for which Ozempic is not indicated … Limiting prescribing of semaglutide to people with type 2 diabetes is essential.”

The story might have remained relatively low-key, but this week it broke into the open with reports in The Guardian and Australian Doctor, which both blamed TikTok for the drug shortage.

@the.builders.wife

Someone pump me up to clean my house 🤣 #ozempicweightloss #ozempicjourney #ozempicau #ozempicforweightloss

♬ About Damn Time – Lizzo

 

#ozempic … 74 million views and counting

People aren’t simply documenting their weight loss journey, they’re injecting themselves with a kind of giddy Pulp Fiction cool.

A typical TikTok user is @taylor_gracve96, who documents her “first time injecting Ozempic” with the requisite fiddly preparation of the pen and lifting of her T-shirt, the squeezing of the abdomen, the pressing in the pointy bit, and using her thumb to drive the plunger and deliver the dose.

@taylor_grace96

Starting my ozempic journey for weight loss today. First time injecting, starting at 83kg 🥰 #ozempic #australia #weightloss #ozempicweightloss #ozempicjourney

♬ Feeling Whitney (Acoustic Instrumental) – JustAcoustic

But it might be @taylor_grace96’s last jab for a while.

The TGA has warned that pharmacists may need to refuse prescriptions for people who have been prescribed semaglutide for a condition other than diabetes.

“People requesting a semaglutide prescription for obesity management should be advised of alternative treatment options, as people using Ozempic for the registered indication of type 2 diabetes are being prioritised,” the TGA said.

According to Australian Doctor, GPs have been advised to contact their diabetes patients and tell them about the shortage. These patients will need to “contact their pharmacy as soon as possible to ensure scripts are filled”.

With TikTokers left in the lurch, expect to see a rush on sad-faced emojis.

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