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GLP-1s, Dementia, Alzheimer's, and Type 3 Diabetes

The suite of new GLP-1 agonists (GLP-1RAs) have shown a cascade of fascinating impacts, but the one that I have my eye on is this new idea that GLP-1 drugs may be preventative of brain aging diseases like Alzheimer's and Dementia.

GLP-1 is a naturally produced hormone in the human gut that regulates appetite and insulin secretion. The GLP-1 agonists drugs that have made a splash the last few years like semaglutide (Ozempic/Wegovy), liraglutide (Victoza/Saxenda), and dulaglutide (Trulicity), were originally developed for type 2 diabetes management.

But a 2026 Systematic Review found:

This study contributes to the clinical understanding of GLP-1 RAs and their effect on cognitive dysfunction. Findings from this study indicate GLP-1 RAs as potential therapeutics targeting cognitive function and neurocognitive disorders in persons living with T2DM.

This finding was echoed by a 2025 review which stated:

preclinical evidence has consistently shown the neuroprotective effects of GLP-1RAs, including reduced amyloid and tau pathology, improved synaptic function and enhanced neuronal survival

And a 2025 meta-analysis found that:

(GLP-1RAs) were associated with a statistically significant reduction in dementia

This finding was paired with a null result for the alternative cardio-protective glucose lowering agent sodium-glucose cotransporter-2 inhibitors (SGLT2is), suggesting the the GLP-1RAs are either using a unique pathway or are simply more effective. Contradictorily, a read world study released on the same day found benefits for both GLP-1RAs and SGLT2is; the meta-analysis may have been underpowered to detect SGLTis' benefits.

The link between Alzheimer's or Dementia and Diabetes is well known, with diabetes cited as a major risk factor. This is important to remember when contextualizing these findings as the population for the studies were almost all individuals with Type 2 Diabetes. That means we don't know if these neuroprotective effects can be generalized to people without T2D.

Interestingly as pointed out by the 2025 review, Alzheimer's and Dementia may be thought of as Type 3 Diabetes, as these diseases may be symptoms of underlying insulin dysregulation in the brain and damaged blood vessels. The tie between dementia and cardiovascular health echoes what we've heard in the past, that what's good for the heart is good for the brain. GLP-1 is naturally boosted by exercise and may point to the same correlation we see with exercise and brain health.

Excited to see how these findings pan out over the next few years, GLP-1RAs still require long term trials and reviews against the general population. The results for major trial targeting adults with early onset Alzheimer's released in March 2026 failed to show efficacy of oral semaglutide in reducing Alzheimer's. Note this study was funded by Novo Nordisk.

Oral semaglutide was not efficacious in slowing clinical progression in participants with early Alzheimer's disease.

This could be due to several reasons like the drug being more preventative than capable of reversing symptoms, weaker impacts of older generation GLP-1RAs or effects not being generalized outside of TD2 patients. But this is the strongest clinical result yet and points to the need for more trials before comprehensively marking success.

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