National Post

AN OZEMPIC nd BABY BOOM?

SOME GLP-1 USERS REPORT UNEXPECTED PREGNANCIE­S

- AMY KLEIN

I THINK THAT WITH WEIGHT LOSS AND BALANCING OF HORMONES AND IMPROVED INSULIN RESISTANCE, THE HORMONAL ACCESS CLICKS BACK IN, AND ALL OF A SUDDEN THEY START OVULATING AGAIN — THEY MIGHT NOT HAVE BEEN OVULATING FOR YEARS. — LORA SHAHINE

Across social media, women who have used Ozempic or similar medication­s for diabetes or weight loss are reporting an unexpected side-effect — surprise pregnancie­s.

The Facebook group “I got pregnant on Ozempic” has more than 500 members. Numerous posts on Reddit and Tiktok discuss unplanned pregnancie­s while on Ozempic and similar drugs, which can spur significan­t weight loss by curbing appetite and slowing the digestive process. The drugs are known as “Glucagon-like peptide 1” or GLP-1 drugs.

The reports of an Ozempic baby boom are anecdotal, and it’s not known how widespread the phenomenon is. Experts say significan­t weight loss can affect fertility. Others speculate that the GLP-1 drugs could interfere with the absorption of oral contracept­ives, causing birth control failures.

“I got pregnant on a GLP1,” posted Deb Oliviara, 32, on her @Dkalsolive Tiktok account, which has 36,000 followers. She had noted in another video that she’d previously suffered two miscarriag­es and a stillbirth.

Oliviara, who lives in Michigan, said in a direct message that she had been using Ozempic for three months before getting pregnant. “I was three weeks along when I found out,” Oliviara said. “I am now three months pregnant, and baby is doing amazing.”

“My little Mounjaro baby is almost six months old after trying for over 10 years with PCOS!” another woman commented on the post, referring to polycystic ovary syndrome, a hormonal health condition that is a leading cause of infertilit­y.

Paige Burnham, 29, who lives in Louisville, had lost about 80 pounds while using Ozempic, also known as semaglutid­e, for Type 2 diabetes when she began feeling nauseous on a trip to Disney World. She assumed the symptom was due to the drug. “My most typical Ozempic side-effect was nausea,” she said.

It was actually morning

sickness — a surprise since she and her partner had tried for four years to conceive. She stopped taking Ozempic and gave birth to a healthy baby boy, Creed, in March 2023.

Little is known about the effects of Ozempic and similar drugs on women who want to get pregnant or who become pregnant while taking the drugs because they were specifical­ly excluded from early clinical trials of the drug. A spokesman for Novo Nordisk, which makes Ozempic and Wegovy, said the company is collecting data to evaluate the safety of becoming pregnant while using Wegovy, the version

of semaglutid­e approved for weight loss.

“Pregnancy or intention to become pregnant were exclusion criteria in our trials with semaglutid­e in both obesity and Type 2 diabetes,” the company said in a statement.

Eli Lilly, maker of the GLP1 drugs Mounjaro and Zepbound, did not respond to requests for comment.

The biggest concern among women who become pregnant using a GLP-1 is whether the drug poses a risk to the fetus. While women like Burnham and Oliviara have posted reassuring stories of delivering healthy babies, doctors say

it’s important to use backup birth control and stop the drug immediatel­y if you become pregnant.

A Novo Nordisk spokesman said there isn’t enough available data to know if the drug poses a risk for birth defects, miscarriag­e or other adverse events related to pregnancy. Based on animal reproducti­on studies for Wegovy, the company said there “may be potential risks to the fetus from exposure to semaglutid­e during pregnancy.”

The company recommends stopping Wegovy at least two months before a planned pregnancy.

According to Ozempic’s

prescribin­g informatio­n, pregnant rats administer­ed Ozempic showed fetal structural abnormalit­ies, fetal growth problems and embryonic mortality. In rabbits and cynomolgus monkeys, there were early pregnancy losses or structural abnormalit­ies as well as maternal body weight loss.

Controllin­g diabetes is important for a healthy pregnancy, and experts say patients taking Ozempic for diabetes should discuss the risks and benefits with their doctor.

While it’s unclear whether women taking a GLP-1 have a higher risk of unplanned pregnancie­s, doctors say there are a few explanatio­ns why some women are getting pregnant.

Weight loss can have an effect on ovulation and fertility, said Lora Shahine, a reproducti­ve endocrinol­ogist.

“I think that with weight loss and balancing of hormones and improved insulin resistance, the hormonal access clicks back in, and all of a sudden they start ovulating again — they might not have been ovulating for years,” said Shahine.

Stephanie Fein, an internist in Los Angeles who specialize­s in helping women lose weight for their fertility, said that losing just five to 10 per cent of body weight can help someone conceive. “No one knows exactly the reason,” she said. “Fat is hormonally active. We know it has effects on estrogen, and it will impact ovulation and possibly egg developmen­t.”

The drugs also may interfere with oral contracept­ives in some patients, doctors say. The GLP-1 drugs help people lose weight by slowing gastric emptying, curbing hunger and leaving people feeling full sooner. It may be that the GLP-1 drugs also affect the absorption of oral contracept­ives, said William Dietz, physician and chair of the STOP Obesity Alliance at the Milken Institute School of Public Health at George Washington University. “This may mean that birth control medication­s are metabolize­d or ineffectiv­e,” he said.

Dietz said most experts recommend discontinu­ing GLP-1 medication­s when pregnancy is detected.

Shahine recommends that women using oral contracept­ives who are taking a GLP-1 drug use a second form of birth control. The drugs also aren’t recommende­d for mothers who are breastfeed­ing. Animal studies have shown semaglutid­e is present in the milk of lactating rats treated with the drug.

After Burnham stopped breastfeed­ing, she resumed taking Ozempic. Because of her past struggles with infertilit­y, she doesn’t want to take birth control, although she said she is concerned about getting pregnant too soon. “I’m not ready yet,” she said.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Not enough is known about the effects of weight-loss drugs on the developing fetus, but animal testing suggests caution is warranted about the drug’s use during pregnancy.
GETTY IMAGES Not enough is known about the effects of weight-loss drugs on the developing fetus, but animal testing suggests caution is warranted about the drug’s use during pregnancy.
 ?? DAVID J. PHILLIP / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Anecdotal evidence from women on social media suggests Ozempic and similar weight-loss drugs used to treat diabetes and obesity may be facilitati­ng pregnancy. Others speculate the drugs are causing birth control failures.
DAVID J. PHILLIP / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Anecdotal evidence from women on social media suggests Ozempic and similar weight-loss drugs used to treat diabetes and obesity may be facilitati­ng pregnancy. Others speculate the drugs are causing birth control failures.

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