PMID-39937469 – Hendershot Semaglutide Alcohol Use Disorder RCT

PMID-39937469 โ€” Hendershot: Semaglutide in Alcohol Use Disorder (JAMA Psychiatry 2025)

[DRAFT โ€” authored 2026-04-19. Citation verified against PubMed/JAMA Psychiatry 2026-04-19.]

Citation

Hendershot CS, Bremmer MP, Paladino MB, Kostantinis G, Gilmore TA, Sullivan NR, Tow AC, Dermody SS, Prince MA, Jordan R, McKee SA, Fletcher PJ, Claus ED, Klein KR. Once-Weekly Semaglutide in Adults With Alcohol Use Disorder: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Psychiatry. 2025;82(4):395-405. doi: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2024.4789. PMID: 39937469. PMCID: PMC11822619.

External URL: PubMed

Study Design

  • Design: Phase 2, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel-arm, randomized clinical trial
  • Setting: Single academic medical center in the US, September 2022 โ€“ February 2024
  • Population: Non-treatment-seeking adults with alcohol use disorder (AUD)
  • N: 48 randomized (of 504 assessed for eligibility)
  • Intervention: Semaglutide 0.25 mg/wk ร— 4 wk โ†’ 0.5 mg/wk ร— 4 wk โ†’ 1.0 mg ร— 1 wk (total 9 weeks outpatient treatment)
  • Primary outcomes: Alcohol self-administration (laboratory task), drinks per drinking day, heavy drinking days, alcohol craving

Key Findings

  • Grams of alcohol consumed (laboratory task): ฮฒ = โˆ’0.48 (95% CI โˆ’0.85 to โˆ’0.11), P = 0.01 โ€” medium-to-large effect size reduction
  • Peak breath alcohol concentration: ฮฒ = โˆ’0.46 (95% CI โˆ’0.87 to โˆ’0.06), P = 0.03
  • Drinks per drinking day: ฮฒ = โˆ’0.41 (95% CI โˆ’0.73 to โˆ’0.09), P = 0.04
  • Weekly alcohol craving: ฮฒ = โˆ’0.39 (95% CI โˆ’0.73 to โˆ’0.06), P = 0.01
  • Heavy drinking over time: Semaglutide predicted greater reductions vs placebo (ฮฒ = 0.84, P = 0.04)
  • Average drinks per calendar day: No significant between-group difference
  • Number of drinking days: No significant between-group difference

Subgroup finding

  • Semaglutide subgroup with baseline current cigarette use showed greater relative reductions in cigarettes per day โ€” secondary finding relevant to the Wang 2024 Ann Intern Med tobacco-use-disorder real-world analysis.

Clinical Relevance

Hendershot 2025 provides Phase 2 RCT evidence for a signal that had been suggested by preclinical and observational data: GLP-1 receptor agonists may reduce alcohol craving and heavy drinking patterns. Core points:

  1. Reduces alcohol self-administration in a laboratory task โ€” proof-of-concept that sem modulates alcohol-seeking behavior
  2. Reduces heavy-drinking pattern (drinks per drinking day, heavy drinking days) more than frequency of drinking (drinks per calendar day, drinking days) โ€” supports mechanism of reduced consumption-per-occasion rather than reduced occasion frequency
  3. Small n (48); non-treatment-seeking population โ€” should be framed as Phase 2 signal, not definitive AUD efficacy evidence
  4. Aligns with Sa 2026 psychiatric SR which noted "potential therapeutic benefit in disorders of reward regulation" and the FDA null-finding for suicidality
  5. Complements Bezin 2024 eClinicalMedicine nationwide case-time-control which found protective association with suicide/attempt

Linked Peptides

Related Lessons

  • Lesson 5.2 โ€” Semaglutide Deep Dive (mental-health / emerging indications triangulation)
  • Lesson 5.4 โ€” Class-level emerging indications

Related Studies

Tags

#research #rct #phase-2 #semaglutide #alcohol-use-disorder #addiction #mental-health #jama-psychiatry