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Nous préparons un guide éducatif complet pour le Weight Regain Risk Calculator. Revenez bientôt pour des explications étape par étape, des formules, des exemples concrets et des conseils d'experts.
The Weight Regain Risk Calculator estimates the probability and magnitude of weight regain after discontinuing GLP-1 receptor agonist therapy. The STEP 1 extension trial provided definitive evidence that approximately two-thirds of weight lost on semaglutide 2.4 mg is regained within one year of discontinuation, making weight regain the single most important long-term consideration for GLP-1 therapy. This calculator models the expected regain trajectory based on duration of prior treatment, amount of weight lost, and the presence or absence of ongoing lifestyle interventions. Weight regain after GLP-1 discontinuation occurs because these medications suppress appetite, slow gastric emptying, and alter brain reward pathways while they are being taken, but these effects reverse when the medication is stopped. The body's homeostatic drive to restore its previous weight, mediated by hormonal signals including increased ghrelin, decreased leptin sensitivity, and restored reward-driven eating behaviors, rapidly returns. Additionally, the metabolic adaptation that occurred during weight loss (reduced basal metabolic rate) persists even after regain, creating an asymmetric biological situation where the body works harder to regain weight than it worked to lose it. The STEP 1 extension data showed that patients who stopped semaglutide after 68 weeks regained approximately 11.6 of the 17.3 percent body weight they had lost (67 percent regain) within 52 weeks. Importantly, metabolic improvements in blood pressure, lipids, and inflammatory markers also reversed in proportion to weight regain, underscoring that the health benefits of GLP-1 therapy are contingent on continued treatment. This calculator serves patients considering whether to discontinue GLP-1 therapy (for cost, side effect, or other reasons), physicians counseling patients about the chronic nature of obesity pharmacotherapy, insurance companies evaluating the cost implications of treatment duration, and health economists modeling the long-term value proposition of indefinite GLP-1 treatment versus intermittent or time-limited therapy.
Expected Regain at T months after discontinuation = Total Weight Lost x Regain Fraction x (1 - e^(-k x T)), where Regain Fraction = 0.67 (from STEP 1 extension, representing two-thirds regain at equilibrium), k = 0.08 per month (rate constant from curve fitting), and T = months since stopping medication. Weight at Month T = Current Weight + Expected Regain. For a worked example: patient lost 40 lbs on GLP-1, discontinued 6 months ago. Regain = 40 x 0.67 x (1 - e^(-0.08 x 6)) = 40 x 0.67 x (1 - 0.619) = 40 x 0.67 x 0.381 = 10.2 lbs regained. At 12 months: 40 x 0.67 x (1 - e^(-0.96)) = 40 x 0.67 x 0.617 = 16.5 lbs regained.
- 1Enter the total weight lost during GLP-1 therapy, which serves as the base from which regain is projected. Greater absolute weight loss provides more weight available for regain, though the percentage regained is relatively consistent across weight loss magnitudes. The calculator accepts either absolute pounds or percentage of body weight lost.
- 2Enter the duration of GLP-1 treatment before discontinuation. Longer treatment duration may slightly reduce the regain fraction because extended exposure to GLP-1 medications may promote some degree of metabolic resetting, though evidence for this is limited. Patients treated for less than 6 months who have not completed dose titration may have different regain patterns than those maintained at therapeutic dose for 12 or more months.
- 3Specify the reason for discontinuation: cost concerns, side effect intolerance, supply interruption, achieving goal weight, physician recommendation, or personal choice. The reason affects the calculator's recommendations: for cost-driven discontinuation, it suggests compounded alternatives or dose reduction strategies; for side effect-driven discontinuation, it suggests medication switching; for goal achievement, it emphasizes the evidence against planned discontinuation.
- 4Indicate whether you plan to maintain lifestyle modifications (structured exercise, dietary control) after stopping medication. While lifestyle interventions alone cannot fully prevent regain, they can reduce the regain fraction from approximately 67 percent to approximately 50 to 55 percent, representing a meaningful difference. The calculator adjusts the regain projection based on the intensity and sustainability of planned lifestyle maintenance.
- 5Review the projected weight regain trajectory showing expected weight at 3, 6, 12, and 24 months after discontinuation. The curve follows an exponential approach to the regain plateau, with approximately 50 percent of the total expected regain occurring in the first 6 months and 90 percent by 12 months. Beyond 12 months, weight may continue to gradually increase but typically stabilizes within 5 to 10 percent of the 12-month weight.
- 6The health impact projection shows how metabolic parameters (A1C, blood pressure, lipids, inflammatory markers) are expected to change as weight is regained. These projections are based on the STEP 1 extension data showing proportional reversal of metabolic improvements. For patients who achieved diabetes remission on GLP-1 therapy, the probability of diabetes recurrence within 12 months of discontinuation is approximately 70 to 80 percent.
- 7The alternative strategies section presents options for patients who want to minimize regain risk without continuing full-dose GLP-1 therapy: dose reduction to the minimum effective dose (e.g., semaglutide 0.5 mg or 1.0 mg rather than 2.4 mg), intermittent dosing (every other week instead of weekly, with limited evidence), switching to a less expensive maintenance medication, or a structured medication taper rather than abrupt discontinuation.
This patient will regain approximately 27 of the 45 lbs lost, retaining only about 18 lbs of net weight loss at the 12-month mark. The moderate lifestyle modifications reduce the regain fraction slightly from 67 to 60 percent. The net retained weight loss still provides some health benefit but far less than the full treatment effect.
Even with the most intensive lifestyle intervention, this patient is projected to regain about 45 percent of their lost weight. The intensive program reduces regain from the typical 67 percent to 45 percent, which is clinically meaningful but does not prevent regain entirely. This scenario illustrates why obesity medicine experts increasingly view GLP-1 therapy as a chronic, ongoing treatment rather than a time-limited intervention.
Supply interruptions force abrupt discontinuation without preparation. The regain trajectory begins immediately and accelerates during the first 6 months. If the patient can resume medication within 2 to 3 months, much of the regain can be reversed, but longer gaps lead to proportionally more regain that takes longer to re-lose upon resumption.
Obesity medicine physicians use regain risk data as the cornerstone of their argument for indefinite GLP-1 treatment. By showing patients the STEP 1 extension data and the projected regain trajectory, physicians can explain why planned discontinuation is medically inadvisable and why obesity should be treated as a chronic condition requiring ongoing medication, similar to hypertension or type 2 diabetes.
Insurance companies use regain data in two opposing ways: some argue that the high regain rate makes GLP-1 therapy cost-ineffective (because benefits are lost when treatment stops), while others argue that regain data proves the need for indefinite coverage (because stopping treatment is medically harmful). The calculator's long-term cost modeling helps payers evaluate both arguments quantitatively.
Health economists use regain models to calculate the true cost-effectiveness of GLP-1 therapy by incorporating the likelihood and cost of regain. A therapy that costs $5,000 per year and maintains 15 percent weight loss indefinitely has a very different value than one that costs $5,000 per year for 2 years and then loses most of its benefit. The calculator's lifetime projections inform these cost-effectiveness analyses.
Patients facing the decision to continue or discontinue GLP-1 therapy use the calculator to understand the likely consequences of stopping. Many patients who are considering discontinuation due to cost or side effects change their decision when they see the regain data quantified, particularly when the alternative strategies (dose reduction, compounded alternatives) can maintain most of the benefit at lower cost or side effect burden.
Patients who discontinue GLP-1 therapy after achieving type 2 diabetes
Patients who discontinue GLP-1 therapy after achieving type 2 diabetes remission (A1C below 6.5 percent without diabetes medications) face a particularly consequential regain risk. The return of excess weight brings the return of insulin resistance and hyperglycemia, typically within 6 to 12 months. For these patients, the cost of regain includes resumption of diabetes medications, increased cardiovascular risk, and potential organ complications. The calculator models the probability and timeline of diabetes recurrence based on the degree of weight regain.
Patients who switch from one GLP-1 medication to another (rather than
Patients who switch from one GLP-1 medication to another (rather than discontinuing entirely) experience a different trajectory than those stopping all GLP-1 therapy. Switching from semaglutide to tirzepatide (or vice versa) typically maintains weight loss and may even produce additional loss. Switching from a GLP-1 to a less effective weight management medication (phentermine, naltrexone-bupropion) typically results in partial regain proportional to the efficacy difference between the two medications.
| Months After Stopping | % of Lost Weight Regained | Appetite Level | Metabolic Markers |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 month | 10-15% | Noticeably increased | Beginning to reverse |
| 3 months | 25-35% | Near pre-treatment levels | Measurably worsened |
| 6 months | 45-55% | Pre-treatment levels | Significantly reversed |
| 12 months | 60-70% | Pre-treatment or higher | Most improvements lost |
| 24 months | 65-75% | Stabilized | Largely returned to baseline |
How much weight will I regain if I stop Ozempic or Wegovy?
Based on the STEP 1 extension trial, patients regain approximately two-thirds (67 percent) of the weight they lost within one year of stopping semaglutide. For example, if you lost 40 pounds, you can expect to regain approximately 27 pounds within 12 months. The regain begins within weeks of the last dose and is most rapid in the first 6 months. Maintaining intensive lifestyle modifications (exercise, dietary control) can reduce the regain to approximately 45 to 55 percent, but cannot prevent it entirely.
Why does weight come back so quickly after stopping GLP-1 medication?
Weight regain occurs because GLP-1 medications suppress appetite and alter food reward pathways while active in the body, but these effects reverse when the drug is cleared. Within days of the last dose, appetite begins to increase, food cravings return, and the capacity for larger meals is restored. Additionally, the metabolic adaptation that occurred during weight loss (reduced metabolic rate, increased metabolic efficiency) persists, meaning the body requires fewer calories than before the weight loss, creating a gap between restored appetite and reduced energy needs that drives rapid regain.
Can I take a lower dose to maintain my weight loss?
Dose reduction is an active area of clinical research and practice. Some patients can maintain much of their weight loss on a lower dose (such as semaglutide 0.5 mg or 1.0 mg instead of 2.4 mg), which reduces cost and side effects while providing ongoing appetite suppression. However, the evidence for specific maintenance dosing protocols is limited, and optimal maintenance doses likely vary by individual. Your physician can help determine the minimum effective dose for weight maintenance through careful dose titration downward with close weight monitoring.
Is there any way to permanently keep the weight off without medication?
The National Weight Control Registry, which tracks individuals who have maintained significant weight loss for 5 or more years, shows that long-term weight maintenance without medication requires substantial ongoing effort: an average of 1 hour of daily exercise, careful dietary monitoring, and consistent behavioral strategies. However, these registry participants typically lost weight through diet and exercise rather than pharmacotherapy, and the greater magnitude of GLP-1-induced weight loss may be harder to maintain through lifestyle alone. For most patients, the most evidence-based approach is ongoing medication plus lifestyle optimization.
Do the health benefits disappear when weight is regained?
Yes, metabolic improvements reverse approximately in proportion to weight regain. The STEP 1 extension data showed that blood pressure, lipid levels, inflammatory markers, and waist circumference all worsened as weight was regained. For patients who achieved diabetes remission on GLP-1 therapy, diabetes recurrence is likely within 12 months of discontinuation if significant weight is regained. This reversal of health benefits is the strongest clinical argument against planned treatment discontinuation.
Conseil Pro
If you must stop GLP-1 therapy, do not stop abruptly. Work with your physician to taper the dose gradually over 4 to 8 weeks while simultaneously intensifying lifestyle interventions. Begin a structured exercise program and increase protein intake before the final dose, not after, so that these habits are established before appetite returns. Weigh yourself weekly and have a pre-agreed trigger weight (for example, 50 percent of weight regained) at which you and your physician will reassess and potentially resume medication.
Le saviez-vous?
The biological drive to regain weight after loss is so powerful that researchers have measured a persistent increase in appetite hormones (ghrelin) for at least 12 months after diet-induced weight loss, even when weight has been partially regained. In a landmark 2011 study published in the New England Journal of Medicine, Sumithran and colleagues showed that the hormonal changes driving hunger after weight loss were still significantly elevated one year later, providing a biological explanation for why 80 to 95 percent of diet-based weight loss is regained within 5 years.