Editor’s note: Watch “Dr. Sanjay Gupta Reports: Is Ozempic Right For You?” at 8 p.m. Sunday, November 17, on CNN.



CNN
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Over the past year, the question has been coming in from everywhere – from my patients and family members, from colleagues and passengers I chatted with on airplanes: Is Ozempic right for me? Or any of the blockbuster weight loss and diabetes drugs that recently caught the world’s attention? While filming my new documentary about the drugs, it became clear that many people have at least considered taking GLP-1 medications, drawn to the possibility of steadier blood sugar, better heart health and especially weight loss.

Even though obesity is now one of the most widespread diseases in the developed world, there is still much debate about how it is diagnosed and what exactly causes it. Some experts question whether it is even a disease at all.

All these topics became the focus of an intense discussion I had in Copenhagen this spring with Dr. Jens Juul Holst, a Danish scientist who helped discover the molecules that are now completely upending the diabetes and weight loss field. By now, you have surely heard of Wegovy, Mounjaro, Zepbound and Ozempic. Some say Holst is a future Nobel Prize winner for this work, while others say he helped further fuel a wildly expensive industry to treat something better addressed with diet and exercise.

Dr. Jens Juul Holst, left, is one of the scientists who helped identify the hormone GLP-1.

Holst is a delightful, energetic, trim and healthy 79-year-old who still rides his bike to work every day. He explained that the original goal of an international team of researchers was to find a molecule that could possibly treat peptic ulcer disease, not diabetes or obesity. Although it wasn’t ultimately beneficial for ulcers, he told me, it was through a series of serendipitous discoveries that they learned that targeting GLP-1 could instead dramatically lower blood sugar and body weight. And importantly for many who had struggled with obesity, these molecules seemed to work when nothing else had. He knew he had helped discover something potentially transformative.

When the first versions of these medications were approved 20 years ago, you might be surprised to learn, there was little fanfare. Hardly anyone heard about them during those early days. Part of the reason was the internal handwringing among pharmaceutical executives not at all confident people would inject themselves to lose weight — and, yes, among scientists like Holst, unclear on what exactly they were treating.

Obesity: A disease in and of itself?

For starters, there is no question that obesity is linked to all sorts of other diseases, such as type 2 diabetes, cancer, heart disease and stroke, to name a few. However, that doesn’t mean the link always exists for everyone or that obesity was by itself the culprit. After all, there are plenty of people who have obesity but don’t have any evidence of heart disease or diabetes. Their blood pressure is normal, and they take no medications. There are no abnormalities in their blood work or impairments in their normal physical function. Their only disease is an elevated BMI — too much weight for their height.

When I asked Karin Conde-Knape, the head of drug development at Novo Nordisk, the maker of Ozempic and Wegovy, about this, she smiled and said, “yes, we call them the ‘happy obese.’” The concern, she added, is that “these patients are on a trajectory toward developing these other diseases.”