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An analysis of millions of U.S. electronic health records suggests use of GLP-1 receptor agonists is associated with a lower long-term risk of knee replacement surgery for people with knee osteoarthritis.
Researchers using the TriNetX dataset compared 42,062 patients prescribed any GLP-1 drug for at least one year with an equal number of matched non-users; roughly 31,000 patients with three yearsâ exposure were also examined.
One year of any GLP-1 use was associated with a hazard ratio of 0.90 for eight-year arthroplasty risk (a 2.8 percentage-point absolute reduction). Newer agents semaglutide and tirzepatide showed larger, duration-dependent associations â three yearsâ use tied to about a 4.7 percentage-point lower eight-year risk (HR ~0.72). Authors estimate, if broadly applied in eligible obese or metabolically impaired patients, that semaglutide/tirzepatide could avert thousands of U.S. and U.K. knee replacements annually.
The study, published in Regional Anesthesia & Pain Medicine in June 2026, is observational: weight change over time, reasons for drug initiation and some clinical severity measures were not recorded, so causality remains unproven.
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MedPage TodayGLP-1 Drugs Cut Need for Knee Replacement








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