Where big pharma goes, the wellness industry follows closely behind. Next stop: GLP-1 receptor agonists.
Called glucagon-like peptide-1 in full, the term âGLP-1â³ on a supplement bottle would likely have confused the average shopper a few years ago. But that was before the rise of medications like Ozempic and Wegovy, the brand names for semaglutide, which mimics the hormone GLP-1 that reduces feelings of hunger. Originally prescribed for type 2 diabetics, semaglutide can also slow digestion and curb cravings, leading to dramatic weight loss for many users.
More recently, their widespread adoption has also created a cottage industry of products, from supplements to nutrition plans, designed to complement and enhance the effects of the injections. Others are positioned as alternatives to GLP-1 agonist medications â Kourtney Kardashianâs supplement brand Lemme, for example, unveiled its GLP-1 supplement on Sep. 12. Made with plant extracts, the productâs description says it âsupports your bodyâs GLP-1 hormone, reduces hunger,â and âsupports healthy weight management.â
Lemme joins a growing group of supplement makers hitting the market with products claiming to either increase or âsupportâ GLP-1 levels in the body, using careful language and scientific study findings to back up their claims. Pendulum and Codeage both sell a GLP-1 Probiotic, and Supergut offers a Gut Healthy GLP-1 Booster. Some leave out explicit mentions of GLP-1, but clearly allude to it: Arraeâs MB-1 supplement for âmetabolic burnâ is described on its product listing as a ânatural faux-zempicâ without mentioning the hormone directly.
Others, like weight management wellness brand SoWell, are releasing products intended to be used alongside GLP-1 agonist injections. SoWell founder Dr. Alexandra Sowa, an internal medicine physician focused on obesity treatment, launched the brandâs GLP-1 Support System in August 2024, which includes packages of fibre, protein, and electrolyte powders meant to help ease common side effects like nausea and dizziness.
There is massive opportunity in the so-called âOzempiconomy.â Last year, Wegovy maker Novo Nordisk surpassed LVMH as the company with the highest market cap in Europe. Circana found that weight management was the third most important wellness concept for US consumers, after improved overall physical health and reduced stress, and between August 2023 and 2024, searches for âGLP-1 supplementâ swelled 792.1 percent, according to data from the trend analysis platform Spate.
Wellness brands who are able to hop on the trend successfully have the potential to tap into several customer groups, including those wary of pharmaceuticals for weight loss, those with cost concerns or severe side effects from the drugs, and those on the drugs themselves.
But thereâs a fine line to tread in doing so: experts, including doctors, say that the use of the hormone in product names amounts mainly to a marketing tactic capitalising on skyrocketing public interest.
âThis is a lot of marketing,â said Dr. Rekha Kumar, the founder of weight loss telehealth startup Found. âThe biggest reason people stop GLP-1s happens to be nausea, and now youâre seeing tons of things out there that help with nausea. Those are real side effects, and they do need to be addressed, but you will see people trying to make money off of it.â
Over-the-Counter âFaux-Zempicâ
While GLP-1 receptor agonists have been shown to be highly effective in weight loss, there are multiple reasons consumers seek out alternatives.
Lemme launched in 2022, and since then, the brand received âthousands of messages from people who were looking for natural alternatives to GLP-1 medications,â said Simon Huck, co-founder of Lemme, who observed âa lot of hesitancyâ among potential customers.
Brand-name GLP-1 agonists can be cost-prohibitive, especially when patients donât meet the BMI threshold set to qualify for insurance coverage.
The Vitamin Shoppe, for example, offers GLP-1 medications in partnership with a telehealth company WellSync. The cost of its brand-name drug injections, including Eli Lillyâs Mounjaro and Novo Nordiskâs Wegovy, range from $1,174 to $1,524 a month, while compounded versions â created by pharmacies when brand names are in short supply â run between $174 to $194 a month. But even cheaper are supplements claiming to boost GLP-1 levels: The Vitamin Shoppe sells the Supergut GLP-1 Booster probiotic at $29 for 15 packets, or less than $60 a month.
These supplements, which typically come in the familiar gummy, pill, or powder formats, are also a more approachable concept for customers wary of injections.
âThere are just some people that are opposed to pharma because they worry about what the impact of that might be or the expense,â said Muriel Gonzalez, the president of supplement retailer The Vitamin Shoppe.
But customers seeking a direct alternative to the new class of GLP-1 receptor agonist drugs via supplements will be disappointed, said Kumar.
While GLP-1 drugs are artificial mimickers of the hormone, supplement brands are targeted toward boosting the natural GLP-1 that is produced in the body through a wide range of different ingredients. But natural GLP-1 is broken down quickly by enzymes, while GLP-1 drugs are not â hence why they are so effective at curbing hunger for long periods of time, said Kumar.
One plant extract, berberine, has been touted as a GLP-1 drug alternative; Google searches for it have grown 31 percent over the past year through August 2024. But those claims have been debunked. Berberine sales for The Vitamin Shoppe peaked in June 2023 with 110 percent growth, but have flattened since the second quarter of 2024.
âThe medication took 30 years to create because it is different from our natural GLP-1,â said Kumar. âThereâs many food products, extracts, supplements, things out there that we can correlate to an increase in the level of GLP-1, but thatâs completely different and really not related to what the impact of GLP-1 receptor agonists have on someone.â
The New Normal
Itâs not just semaglutide alternatives that are gaining traction, but products designed for those who are taking the shots themselves. Itâs a market that seems to be growing by the day: As of May 2024, one in eight Americans have taken a GLP-1 medication, according to health policy research organisation KFF.
These offerings cater to all parts of a patientâs semaglutide journey, starting with the early days of using the drug â 26 percent of patients taking a GLP-1 drug discontinue use within three months, according to a recent study published in JAMA. While cost can be one reason for stopping, experts say that many patients are quitting due to the severity of the side effects such as nausea and dizziness. New products like SoWellâs latest launch are meant to help ease those side effects.
âIf you just stop drinking, eating, just because the drug over-suppresses your appetite, youâre not going to feel well. Youâre not going to have success on these medications,â said Dr. Sowa.
A variety of companies are getting in on the GLP-1 support market. Upscale gym chains including Equinox and Life Time have rolled out strength-focused training plans for members on GLP-1 drugs; Life Time also provides GLP-1 agonist injections at an onsite clinic. WeightWatchers, which recently acquired Sequence, a telehealth company that prescribes GLP-1 medicine, created a special diet plan for those on the drugs. Weight-loss brand Atkins, food and beverage company Nestlé and the nutrition arm of healthcare brand Abbott have created food products designed for GLP-1 agonist users.
Soon enough, there will be âtons of options available for the consumer,â said Huck.