---
title: "GLP-1 FAQ — India"
description: "56 evidence-based FAQ answers about GLP-1 therapy in India"
canonical: "https://www.kesho.health/faq"
markdown_url: "https://www.kesho.health/md/faq"
language: "en-IN"
---

# GLP-1 FAQ for Indian patients

**Canonical HTML:** https://www.kesho.health/faq  
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## Basics & How GLP-1 Works

### What is a GLP-1 receptor agonist?

A GLP-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA) is a prescription medicine that mimics the gut hormone GLP-1. It helps your pancreas release insulin when blood sugar is high, reduces appetite, and slows stomach emptying. In India, this drug class includes semaglutide, liraglutide, dulaglutide, and the dual GIP/GLP-1 agent tirzepatide. These are not brand names alone—they are distinct molecules your doctor selects based on your health profile. Kesho explains how they work; we do not prescribe or sell them.

### How is GLP-1 different from insulin?

Insulin directly lowers blood sugar by replacing or supplementing the hormone your pancreas makes. GLP-1 receptor agonists stimulate your own insulin release in a glucose-dependent way—meaning less hypoglycaemia risk when used alone. GLP-1 medicines also reduce appetite and slow digestion, effects insulin does not provide. Some type 2 diabetes patients use both under careful medical supervision, with doses adjusted to prevent low blood sugar.

### How long before GLP-1 shows results?

Blood sugar improvements often appear within four to eight weeks as doses are titrated upward. Weight changes typically become noticeable after eight to twelve weeks. Maximum benefits may require three to six months of consistent use alongside nutrition and physical activity. Early weeks may bring nausea before appetite reduction fully develops—patience during titration is important.

### Is GLP-1 approved for use in India?

Yes. CDSCO has approved GLP-1 receptor agonists including semaglutide and tirzepatide for specified indications such as type 2 diabetes and chronic weight management. Medicines must be purchased from licensed pharmacies with a valid prescription. Unapproved imports and compounded products are not equivalent to CDSCO-regulated medicines.

### Which GLP-1 drug classes are CDSCO-approved in India?

As of 2026, CDSCO has approved medicines in the GLP-1 receptor agonist class—including semaglutide, liraglutide, and dulaglutide—as well as the dual GIP/GLP-1 receptor agonist tirzepatide, for specified indications such as type 2 diabetes and chronic weight management. Each molecule has distinct approved formulations (injectable pens, some oral). Approval status applies to licensed manufacturers' products sold through pharmacies with valid prescriptions—not to compounded, imported, or unregistered preparations.

### Is semaglutide safe to use in India?

CDSCO-approved semaglutide from licensed pharmacies is considered safe for appropriate patients when prescribed and monitored by a qualified physician. Safety depends on correct indication, dose titration, and screening for contraindications such as MEN2 or medullary thyroid carcinoma family history. Products from unverified online sellers, without cold-chain handling, or without prescription carry additional risks unrelated to the molecule itself. Report persistent nausea, severe abdominal pain, or neck symptoms promptly.

## Eligibility & Indian Guidelines

### What BMI is needed for GLP-1 in India?

For obesity pharmacotherapy, ICMR and RSSDI-aligned practice often considers BMI ≥27.5 kg/m² without comorbidities, or BMI ≥25 kg/m² with comorbidities such as prediabetes, hypertension, dyslipidaemia, fatty liver, or sleep apnoea—after structured lifestyle intervention. For type 2 diabetes, BMI alone is not the deciding factor; inadequate glycaemic control despite metformin and lifestyle is key. South Asian thin-fat phenotype means waist circumference and metabolic risk matter alongside scale weight.

### Can I get GLP-1 with only prediabetes?

Prediabetes alone rarely triggers GLP-1 prescribing, but prediabetes as a comorbidity may support obesity pharmacotherapy when BMI criteria are met and lifestyle alone has not succeeded. Metformin and intensive lifestyle remain more established for diabetes prevention. Your endocrinologist, internal medicine specialist, or cardiologist individualises this decision.

### Who should not take GLP-1 medicines?

Contraindications include pregnancy and breastfeeding; personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma or MEN2; history of severe pancreatitis; and type 1 diabetes (not indicated). Caution applies in severe gastroparesis, active eating disorders without psychiatric support, and frail patients where further weight loss is harmful. Full medical history screening precedes any prescription.

### Do I need a specialist or can my GP prescribe?

Endocrinologists, internal medicine specialists, and cardiologists commonly initiate and monitor GLP-1 therapy in India—especially for complex obesity, insulin combinations, cardiovascular disease, or thyroid history. General physicians may co-manage stable patients after specialist initiation. Tier-2 city patients may use teleconsultation with metro specialists plus local follow-up. Ensure your prescriber is NMC-registered.

### Can I take GLP-1 without having diabetes?

Yes, for eligible patients. CDSCO has approved certain GLP-1 receptor agonists for chronic weight management in adults meeting BMI and comorbidity criteria—even without type 2 diabetes. This is distinct from off-label use. You still need a prescription, medical screening, and structured lifestyle support. GLP-1 is not a cosmetic weight-loss shortcut for people below guideline thresholds.

### Is GLP-1 suitable for elderly patients in India?

GLP-1 can benefit older adults with type 2 diabetes or obesity-related comorbidities, but frail patients, those with unintentional weight loss, or adults over 75 need careful assessment. Risks include nausea affecting nutrition, muscle loss without adequate protein, and falls if dehydration occurs. Start low, titrate slowly, and monitor kidney function, bone health, and functional status. Family involvement in injection technique and storage helps.

### Can women with PCOS use GLP-1 in India?

PCOS with insulin resistance and obesity may make a patient eligible for GLP-1 when BMI criteria are met and lifestyle intervention has not achieved goals. GLP-1 may improve weight, metabolic markers, and in some cases menstrual regularity—but it is not a fertility treatment. Stop before planned conception with medical guidance. Combine with nutrition, activity, and gynaecology or endocrinology follow-up.

## Cost, Access & Insurance

### How much does GLP-1 cost per month in India?

Out-of-pocket costs in 2026 typically range from approximately ₹8,000 to ₹25,000 monthly depending on molecule (semaglutide vs tirzepatide), dose, brand versus generic, and city. Generic semaglutide may reduce costs to roughly ₹6,000–₹14,000. Oral semaglutide is often similarly priced to injections. Budget for long-term therapy—stopping due to cost without medical planning often leads to regain.

### Does health insurance cover GLP-1 in India?

Most standard policies do not cover outpatient GLP-1 for obesity. Some corporate health plans partially cover diabetes indications after prior authorisation and documented HbA1c failure on metformin. CGHS and PM-JAY generally do not include routine outpatient GLP-1. Ask your HR benefits team and read OPD pharmacy riders carefully.

### Are generic semaglutide products safe?

CDSCO-approved generic semaglutide from licensed manufacturers must meet bioequivalence standards—distinct from illegal imports or social-media sellers. Verify manufacturer name, batch number, expiry, and cold-chain handling. Extremely low prices from unverified sources are red flags for counterfeit products.

### Can I buy GLP-1 without a prescription?

No. GLP-1 RAs are Schedule H prescription-only medicines in India. Purchasing without prescription is illegal and exposes you to counterfeit, degraded, or incorrectly dosed products. CDSCO has issued advisories against unapproved online sellers.

### Which GLP-1 drug class is the most affordable in India?

Among CDSCO-approved options, generic injectable semaglutide and older molecules such as liraglutide or dulaglutide typically sit at the lower end of monthly out-of-pocket costs—roughly ₹6,000–₹14,000 for semaglutide generics versus ₹15,000–₹25,000 for newer dual-agonist therapy at studied doses. Oral semaglutide is often similarly priced to injections. Actual cost depends on dose, pharmacy, and city—not on social media claims. Discuss molecule choice with your doctor based on clinical need and sustainable budget.

### How much does GLP-1 cost in Mumbai, Delhi, or Bangalore?

Metro pharmacy pricing in 2026 is broadly similar across Mumbai, Delhi NCR, and Bangalore for the same molecule and dose—typically ₹8,000–₹25,000 monthly out of pocket, with generic semaglutide toward the lower range. Marginal differences reflect pharmacy markups, corporate hospital OPD dispensing fees, and cold-chain logistics—not fundamentally different drug pricing by city. Tier-2 cities may see slightly higher per-unit costs due to limited stockist networks. Always compare licensed pharmacies and budget for long-term therapy.

### Is compounded or custom-mixed semaglutide legal in India?

No. CDSCO regulates finished pharmaceutical products from licensed manufacturers—not pharmacy-compounded GLP-1 preparations for individual patients. Compounded semaglutide promoted on social media falls outside approved quality, dosing, and cold-chain standards. CDSCO advisories warn against unapproved GLP-1 products. Use only CDSCO-approved medicines from licensed pharmacies with a valid prescription.

## Safety & Side Effects

### What are the most common GLP-1 side effects?

Nausea is most frequent, followed by vomiting, diarrhoea, constipation, bloating, and reflux—especially during the first four to eight weeks of each dose increase. Eating smaller portions, avoiding greasy foods, and following gradual titration schedules reduce symptoms. Most patients improve as the body adapts. Persistent vomiting causing dehydration requires urgent medical care.

### Does GLP-1 cause thyroid cancer?

Rodent studies prompted regulatory precautions, but definitive human causation in patients without medullary thyroid carcinoma or MEN2 family history is not established. GLP-1 is contraindicated with personal or family MTC/MEN2 history. Report neck lumps, hoarseness, or swallowing difficulty to your doctor.

### What are signs of pancreatitis on GLP-1?

Seek emergency care for severe upper abdominal pain lasting hours, often radiating to the back, with persistent vomiting and inability to tolerate fluids. Stop the medicine and contact your doctor immediately if these symptoms occur.

### Can GLP-1 affect kidney function?

GLP-1 RAs may slow diabetic kidney disease progression in trials. However, dehydration from vomiting during titration can temporarily raise creatinine. Stay hydrated, especially in Indian summers. Many products need no dose change until advanced chronic kidney disease—specialist guidance required.

### Is GLP-1 safe during pregnancy?

No. GLP-1 receptor agonists are not recommended during pregnancy or breastfeeding due to limited human safety data. Stop before conception with medical guidance—semaglutide's long half-life may require washout weeks. Use pregnancy-safe diabetes treatments such as insulin if needed.

### Can GLP-1 cause hair loss?

Hair thinning is not a common listed side effect of GLP-1 receptor agonists, but rapid weight loss from any cause—including GLP-1 therapy—can trigger telogen effluvium, a temporary shedding phase lasting several months. Nutritional deficiencies (iron, protein, zinc, vitamin D) during aggressive calorie reduction may worsen hair health. If shedding is severe or patchy, see a dermatologist to rule out other causes such as thyroid disease or alopecia areata.

### Is GLP-1 safe if I have thyroid nodules?

Thyroid nodules alone are not an automatic contraindication if you lack personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma or MEN2. GLP-1 carries a precaution based on rodent studies, not proven human thyroid cancer risk in typical patients. Your endocrinologist may monitor nodules with ultrasound and review fine-needle aspiration results before prescribing. Report new neck lumps, hoarseness, or swallowing difficulty promptly.

### Can I take GLP-1 after a kidney transplant?

This requires specialist nephrology and transplant team approval. GLP-1 receptor agonists may offer metabolic benefits, but immunosuppressant interactions, fluctuating kidney function, and infection risk during GI side effects need individual assessment. Dose adjustments and closer monitoring of creatinine, drug levels, and hydration apply. Do not start GLP-1 after transplant without explicit clearance from your transplant physician.

### Can GLP-1 help fatty liver (NAFLD) in India?

Clinical trials show GLP-1 receptor agonists can reduce liver fat and improve NAFLD-related markers alongside weight loss—relevant given India's high NAFLD prevalence with metabolic syndrome. GLP-1 is not a standalone liver treatment; lifestyle modification remains foundational. Severe liver disease may need hepatology input before prescribing. Monitor alcohol intake and metabolic comorbidities concurrently.

### What blood tests are needed before starting GLP-1?

Typical baseline workup includes fasting glucose or HbA1c, kidney function (creatinine, eGFR), liver enzymes, lipid profile, thyroid function if clinically indicated, and pregnancy test when relevant. Your doctor may check calcitonin or review thyroid imaging history for MEN2/MTC screening. Repeat labs during titration monitor tolerance and metabolic response. Bring prior reports to your first consultation to avoid duplicate testing.

## Nutrition, Lifestyle & Daily Life

### What should I eat on GLP-1 therapy in India?

Prioritise smaller portions with adequate protein—dal, paneer, eggs, fish, soya—and plenty of vegetables and fibre. Use the half-plate vegetable model with quarter protein and quarter complex carbs (millet, brown rice). Avoid heavy fried foods during titration when nausea is common. Hydrate well. GLP-1 reduces appetite but does not replace balanced Indian nutrition or muscle-preserving protein intake.

### Can vegetarians use GLP-1 safely?

Yes. GLP-1 medicines are synthetic peptides, not animal-derived food products. Vegetarian and Jain patients need deliberate protein planning—dal, paneer, soya, curd—to prevent muscle loss during weight reduction. Monitor vitamin B12 and vitamin D.

### Can I drink alcohol on GLP-1?

Alcohol worsens nausea, adds empty calories, and increases hypoglycaemia risk if combined with sulfonylureas or insulin. Patients with fatty liver should minimise alcohol. If drinking, do so sparingly with food, avoid during titration peaks, and never on an empty stomach if on diabetes medicines.

### How do I travel with GLP-1 pens in India?

Carry prescription copies, keep pens in insulated cold bags before first use, and never check baggage with temperature extremes. Plan weekly injection timing across time zones with your doctor. Carry a sharps container for used needles. Identify licensed pharmacies at your destination for emergency refills.

### Will I regain weight if I stop GLP-1?

Substantial regain is common within a year of stopping without sustained lifestyle support or maintenance pharmacotherapy. Plan maintenance from treatment start—habits, exercise, and possibly continued lower-dose therapy. Discuss tapering with your doctor; do not stop diabetes medicines abruptly without glucose monitoring.

### Can I take GLP-1 with Ayurvedic or herbal supplements?

Tell your doctor about all supplements—many Ayurvedic preparations contain herbs that affect blood sugar, blood pressure, or liver enzymes. There is no established safety data for combining GLP-1 with specific traditional formulations. Avoid unverified "weight-loss" herbal products marketed alongside GLP-1 on social media. Prioritise evidence-based nutrition; do not replace prescribed medicines with supplements.

### How much exercise is safe on GLP-1 therapy?

Regular activity supports muscle preservation during weight loss—aim for 150 minutes weekly of moderate aerobic exercise plus twice-weekly resistance training as tolerated. Start gently during early titration when nausea is common. Hydrate well, especially in Indian heat. If on insulin or sulfonylureas, monitor for hypoglycaemia during longer workouts. Your physiotherapist or doctor can tailor intensity to your fitness level.

## Comparisons & Other Medicines

### Semaglutide vs tirzepatide—which is better?

Semaglutide activates GLP-1 receptors only; tirzepatide activates both GIP and GLP-1. Trials suggest tirzepatide may achieve greater average weight and HbA1c reductions at studied doses, but it costs more in India and individual tolerance varies. Oral semaglutide suits injection-averse patients. Your doctor selects based on clinical profile, cost, and prior tolerance—not social media trends.

### Can GLP-1 be taken with metformin?

Yes—this is a common and recommended combination when metformin alone is insufficient. Metformin usually continues unless kidney function or side effects prohibit it. GI symptoms from both may overlap initially; titration pacing helps.

### What happens to my other diabetes tablets on GLP-1?

Sulfonylureas are often reduced or stopped to prevent hypoglycaemia. SGLT2 inhibitors may continue for cardiorenal benefit alongside GLP-1. Insulin doses typically decrease when GLP-1 is added. DPP-4 inhibitors are usually stopped rather than combined. Never adjust doses yourself—work with your diabetologist.

### GLP-1 vs bariatric surgery—how do I choose?

GLP-1 suits moderate obesity with typical loss of 10–15% body weight at ongoing monthly cost. Surgery achieves greater sustained loss for severe obesity (often BMI ≥37.5 or ≥32.5 with major comorbidities) at ₹2–5 lakh upfront. Some patients trial GLP-1 before surgery; others use GLP-1 after surgery if weight recurs. Multidisciplinary assessment guides choice.

### Does Kesho prescribe or sell GLP-1?

No. Kesho is an education platform only. We help you understand GLP-1 drug classes, prepare doctor questions, and navigate nutrition and lifestyle. We do not diagnose, prescribe, sell pharmaceutical products, or determine eligibility. Always consult a qualified physician for medical decisions.

### Oral vs injectable semaglutide—which should I choose in India?

Both are CDSCO-approved semaglutide formulations with similar drug-class efficacy in trials, though injectable weekly pens may achieve slightly greater average weight reduction at studied doses. Oral semaglutide suits injection-averse patients but requires daily dosing on an empty stomach with strict timing rules—challenging during Indian fasting festivals or irregular meal patterns. Monthly costs are often comparable. Your doctor weighs convenience, tolerance, and adherence—not social media preference.

### Is liraglutide still prescribed in India?

Yes. Liraglutide—a once-daily injectable GLP-1 receptor agonist—remains available and prescribed for type 2 diabetes and weight management in India, often at lower monthly cost than newer weekly agents. It requires daily injections versus weekly semaglutide or dulaglutide. Efficacy and side-effect profiles differ by molecule; your diabetologist selects based on clinical need, insurance, and prior tolerance.

### Can GLP-1 be used with blood pressure medicines?

Yes. GLP-1 receptor agonists are commonly combined with antihypertensives and may modestly lower blood pressure through weight loss. Monitor for dizziness or lightheadedness during early titration, especially if already on multiple BP medicines. ACE inhibitors and ARBs often continue alongside GLP-1 for cardiorenal benefit in diabetes. Never stop BP medicines without medical advice.

### Is GLP-1 recommended for type 2 diabetes with heart disease?

GLP-1 receptor agonists with proven cardiovascular benefit in trials—such as liraglutide, semaglutide, and dulaglutide—are often preferred add-ons when type 2 diabetes coexists with established cardiovascular disease, alongside statins and blood pressure control per RSSDI/ICMR-aligned practice. Tirzepatide cardiovascular outcome data continues to evolve. Individualise with your cardiologist and diabetologist.

## Using GLP-1 Medicines: Pens, Doses & Storage

### How do I use a GLP-1 injection pen?

Always follow your doctor's and product leaflet instructions—steps vary slightly by device. General steps: wash hands; attach a new sterile needle; prime the pen per leaflet; select the prescribed dose; inject subcutaneously into abdomen, thigh, or upper arm; rotate injection sites weekly; dispose of needles in a sharps container. Never share pens. Ask your pharmacist or diabetes educator for a demonstration at first prescription.

### How often do I need to inject GLP-1?

Frequency depends on the molecule: semaglutide and dulaglutide are typically once weekly; liraglutide is once daily; tirzepatide is once weekly. Oral semaglutide is taken daily instead of injecting. Doses start low and increase gradually over weeks per titration schedules—do not skip ahead. Set phone reminders and align injection day with a consistent weekly routine.

### How should I store GLP-1 pens in Indian summer heat?

Unopened pens need refrigeration at 2–8°C—use a dedicated fridge compartment, not the freezer. After first use, most products tolerate room temperature up to 30°C for several weeks; avoid direct sunlight, car dashboards, and kitchen heat near stoves. During power cuts or travel, use insulated cold bags with ice packs—not loose ice touching the pen. Discard if exposed to extreme heat or if solution looks cloudy or discoloured.

### What should I do if I miss a GLP-1 dose?

Missed-dose rules vary by product—check your leaflet or call your doctor. For weekly injectables: if within a few days of the scheduled dose, inject as soon as remembered; if near the next dose, skip the missed one and resume your regular schedule—do not double dose. For daily liraglutide, take when remembered unless close to the next dose. Keep a dose diary or app reminder to maintain steady drug levels.

### How should I dispose of used GLP-1 pens in India?

Used injectable pens and needles are biomedical waste. Do not throw them in household dustbins. Many metro hospitals and pharmacies accept sharps in puncture-proof containers; some municipalities run biomedical waste collection. Never recap needles. If no local programme exists, store used pens in a sealed rigid container and ask your clinic or chemist about disposal options. CDSCO pharmacovigilance does not replace proper sharps disposal—protect waste handlers and the environment.

### Can GLP-1 affect mood, anxiety, or depression?

Large trials have not shown a consistent increase in depression or suicidal ideation with GLP-1 receptor agonists, but individual responses vary. Rapid weight change, nausea, and social stress can affect mood. If you notice persistent low mood, anxiety, or sleep changes after starting therapy, tell your doctor promptly—do not stop medicines abruptly without guidance. GLP-1 is not a mental health treatment; psychiatric support remains important when needed.

### How do I verify a GLP-1 product is CDSCO-approved?

Check the CDSCO approved drug database or SUGAM portal for the manufacturer, molecule, and formulation. Legitimate packs show batch number, expiry, storage instructions, and a licensed manufacturer address. Buy only from pharmacies with a valid prescription—avoid social-media sellers and unlabelled imports. If price seems impossibly low or packaging lacks Hindi/English inserts, treat it as a red flag and consult your doctor before use.

## Surgery, Special Situations & Stopping Therapy

### When should I stop GLP-1 before surgery?

GLP-1 receptor agonists slow stomach emptying, raising aspiration risk under anaesthesia. Major surgical society guidance often recommends holding weekly GLP-1 injections for about one week before elective surgery with general anaesthesia or deep sedation—longer for daily agents or higher doses. Inform your surgeon and anaesthetist about GLP-1 use at pre-operative assessment. Do not stop diabetes medicines without a perioperative glucose plan.

### Can teenagers or children use GLP-1 in India?

Paediatric approvals are limited and indication-specific. Some GLP-1 receptor agonists are approved abroad for adolescents with obesity above defined age and BMI thresholds; Indian prescribing for minors requires paediatric endocrinology supervision and careful growth, bone health, and psychological assessment. GLP-1 is not appropriate for casual childhood weight management. Family-based lifestyle intervention remains first-line.

### How do I safely stop GLP-1 therapy?

Do not stop diabetes medicines abruptly without a plan—blood sugar may rise. For obesity-only use, discuss tapering versus stopping with your doctor, recognising regain risk. Semaglutide's long half-life means effects fade gradually over weeks. Maintain nutrition, protein intake, and exercise habits built during therapy. Schedule follow-up labs and weight checks at three and six months after stopping.
