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Ozempic is a diabetes medicine. It is used along with diet and exercise to treat adults whose type 2 diabetes is not satisfactorily controlled. More recently, it has been used to help people manage their weight, but, in Ireland, this is an off-label use. This means that the medicine is being used in a way that is different to what it has been officially approved for.
We found one study that looked at people aged over 66 in the US. It found no evidence of an increased risk of bowel cancer compared to other treatments for type 2 diabetes.
Another study looked at people taking anti-diabetic medicines in the US and found that people taking GLP-1Ras (the group of drugs that includes Ozempic) had a lower risk of developing bowel cancer compared with those taking another type 2 diabetes drug, metformin. This study also found that when patients were on GLP-1RAs for a longer time, the risk fell further.
Another study of people taking anti-diabetic medicine, this time conducted in the UK, found that GLP-1RAs were not associated with an increased risk of colorectal cancer
Ozempic was not among the GLP1-RAs studied in any of the above research studies.
The studies we found are real-world database cohort studies. These are not considered to provide very strong evidence. We would need better-quality studies before we can be certain about whether using Ozempic increases the risk of bowel cancer.
Things to Remember
Ask whether the treatments available to you are sufficiently different from those in the research studies that the results may not apply to you.
Always ask yourself whether the possible advantages of a treatment outweigh the disadvantages of the treatment.
It is important that the evidence is specifically relevant to you and in particular, it is important to check if the treatments are different from those available to you.
Reviewers
Lead Researcher: Dr Marie Tierney, Post-doctoral researcher, Evidence Synthesis Ireland and Cochrane Ireland, College of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, University of Galway.
Reviewed by: Dr. Paula Byrne, Senior post-doctoral researcher, iHealthFacts, Evidence Synthesis Ireland and Cochrane Ireland, College of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, University of Galway.
Topic advisor: Prof. Maureen Kelly, Associate Professor, School of Medicine, Discipline of General Practice, University of Galway.
Public and Patient advisor: Deirdre Mac Loughlin, Public and Patient Involvement in research (PPI) advisor, PPI Ignite, University of Galway.
Journalist Advisor: Dr. Claire O’Connell, PhD in cell biology, Masters in Science Communication. Contributor to The Irish Times, writing about health, science and innovation.
Conflict of Interest Statement: The authors have no financial or other conflicts of interest for this health claim summary.
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