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Tirzepatide

Mounjaro, Zepbound, LY3298176

Quick Stats
Studies 183
Trials 100
Score 4
2025 pubmed

Impact of Tirzepatide on diet-related quality of life and treatment satisfaction in people with type 2 diabetes mellitus: a retrospective cross-sectional study.

Kato. Shunsuke S; Kokita. Ayaka A; Akanuma. Hana H; Iwamura. Shogo S; Takahashi. Yuya Y; Kusumi. Ryota R; Abe. Sakiko S; Sasaki. Kana K; Otomo. Hitomi H; Ando. Sayaka S; Nara. Mitsuhiko M; Nara. Aiko A; Tadika. Takenobu T; Shimizu. Tatsunori T; Sato. Takehiro T; Morii. Tsukasa T; Fujita. Hiroki H; Matsuda. Daisuke D; Waki. Hironori H

Key Findings

  • HbA1c fell from 7.4% to 6.4% after tirzepatide treatment
  • Body weight dropped from 77.2 kg to 70.6 kg
  • Diet‑related quality of life, especially perceived benefits of dietary therapy, rose significantly
  • Changes in BMI and diet‑related QoL independently predicted higher treatment‑satisfaction scores

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers aiming at metabolic health, tirzepatide can be a dual tool for glycemic control and improving how you feel about eating plans. Track both weight and diet‑related quality of life to gauge benefits, and consider standard clinical dosing as a starting point while monitoring satisfaction.

Summary

Tirzepatide not only drops blood sugar and weight in people with type 2 diabetes, it also makes them feel better about their diet and more satisfied with treatment, even beyond the weight loss effect.

Abstract

To explore how Tirzepatide (TZP) treatment influences diet-related quality of life (QoL) and thus treatment satisfaction. This retrospective observational study analyzed 95 people with type 2 diabetes mellitus treated with TZP. We evaluated measurements before and after TZP treatment for clinical parameters (including BMI and HbA1c) and, via validated questionnaires, patient-reported treatment satisfaction and diet-related QoL (including the Diabetes Diet-Related Quality of Life-Revised 9 (DDRQOL-R-9)). We used Spearman correlations and multiple regression analyses to identify predictors of treatment satisfaction. TZP treatment led to significant reduction of median HbA1c (7.4 % to 6.4 %) and body weight (77.2 kg to 70.6 kg). Median diet-related QoL, specifically the "perceived merits of dietary therapy", increased from 58.3 [IQR 50.0, 75.0] to 67.7 [50.0, 83.3] (p < 0.01). Multiple regression analysis identified changes in BMI (standardized β = - 0.21, p = 0.030) and changes in diet-related QoL "perceived merits of dietary therapy" (β = 0.23, p = 0.019) as independent predictors of DTSQs scores post-TZP treatment. Despite TZP's appetite-suppressing effects, diet-related QoL, particularly the "perceived merits of dietary therapy", significantly increased with treatment, serving as an independent and substantial contributor to patient satisfaction, comparable to the impact of body weight reduction.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2025

Date

2025-09-20T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.diabres.2025.112913

References

48