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Tirzepatide

Mounjaro, Zepbound, LY3298176

Quick Stats
Studies 183
Trials 100
Score 3
2025 pubmed 1 citations

Obesity as a Chronic Disease: A Narrative Review of Evolving Definitions, Management Strategies, and Cardiometabolic Prioritization.

Singh. Vidhi V; Sun. Jia J; Cheng. Susan S; Kwan. Alan C AC; Velazquez. Amanda A

Key Findings

  • Obesity involves genetics, biology, environment, and behavior, and excess dysfunctional fat drives inflammation and metabolic problems.
  • BMI alone doesn’t accurately reflect harmful fat; more precise measures are needed for treatment decisions.
  • Tirzepatide (and other GLP‑1‑based drugs) shows strong weight‑loss effects plus potential cardiovascular, renal, and liver benefits, but is underused.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, tirzepatide appears to be a powerful option for weight loss and overall metabolic health, but it requires a prescription and medical monitoring. Consider discussing it with a knowledgeable clinician and stay aware of emerging dosing protocols as research evolves.

Summary

This review explains that obesity is a complex disease and that the usual BMI measure isn’t enough to judge health risks. It highlights tirzepatide, a drug similar to semaglutide, as a promising new tool that can help people lose weight and also improve heart, kidney, and liver health. However, only a small fraction of people with obesity are currently getting these kinds of treatments, so wider access and better doctor training are needed.

Abstract

Obesity is a multifactorial, complex disease that is driven by genetic, biological, environmental, and behavioral factors. In this review, we explain the key contributors to obesity, limitations in current definitions, its relationship with cardiometabolic health, and recent advancements in treatment. Obesity is characterized by the presence of excess and dysfunctional adipose tissue, driven by chronic inflammation and maladaptive energy homeostasis. Although body mass index (BMI) has historically been used to diagnose obesity, BMI provides a limited evaluation of individual patients because it fails to specifically quantify adiposity, which is the primary determinant of metabolic impact in these patients. There is an ongoing and necessary shift in treating obesity with a weight-inclusive approach that aims to address obesity upstream and prevent downstream cardiometabolic health complications. This approach is being supported by various treatment options, notably glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists like semaglutide and tirzepatide, that also have promising effects on cardiovascular, renal, and liver health. Advances in precision medicine, gut microbiome research, and Multi-target therapies support personalized therapeutic approach. Despite these developments, less than 25% of individuals living with obesity are receiving evidence-based treatment. There is an urgent need to improve health care delivery to patients with obesity through timely, affordable, and multimodal treatments that promote sustainable and sustained weight loss. Increasing board certification of practicing physicians through the American Board of Obesity Medicine will be critical to improving access and quality of care.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2025

Date

2025-09-05T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s12325-025-03352-y

Citations

1

References

186