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Evidence-based supplements similar to Dulaglutide, ranked by shared goals and clinical evidence. Compare any of them head-to-head below.
An FDA-approved GLP-1 receptor agonist (Ozempic/Rybelsus for type 2 diabetes, Wegovy for chronic weight management) with genuinely strong, large-RCT evidence for glycemic control and substantial weight loss, plus a cardiovascular-outcomes benefit. Honest appraisal: this is a real prescription medicine with real efficacy AND real risks — a boxed warning for thyroid C-cell tumors, pancreatitis and gallbladder risk, very common GI side effects, and growing concern about grey-market/compounded versions. It is included here for reference only, not as a supplement and not auto-recommended.
An FDA-approved, once-daily GLP-1 receptor agonist (Victoza for type 2 diabetes, Saxenda for chronic weight management). Honest appraisal: a real prescription medicine with genuinely strong large-RCT evidence for glycemic control and moderate weight loss, plus a cardiovascular-outcomes benefit (LEADER). It also carries real risks — a boxed warning for thyroid C-cell tumors, pancreatitis and gallbladder risk, very common GI side effects, and lean-mass loss with weight loss. Included here for reference only; it is NOT a supplement and is not auto-recommended.
An investigational once-weekly injectable, exendin-based (exenatide-lineage) GLP-1 receptor agonist most famous for the AMPLITUDE-O cardiovascular-outcomes trial — the first to show that an EXENDIN-based (rather than human-GLP-1-based) agonist reduces major adverse cardiovascular events AND kidney-outcome events in high-risk type 2 diabetes. Honest framing: in AMPLITUDE-O (NEJM 2021, n=4,076) efpeglenatide cut MACE by ~27% and a composite kidney outcome by ~32% versus placebo, and across its phase-2/3 program it lowered HbA1c (up to ~1.0-1.2%) and bodyweight (placebo-adjusted up to ~7 kg in obesity without diabetes). BUT it is INVESTIGATIONAL and not FDA-approved or marketed anywhere; the proven benefits are metabolic and cardiorenal (HbA1c, weight, MACE, kidney) — NOT a demonstrated lifespan/longevity outcome. It carries the full GLP-1-class GI side-effect burden (very common dose-dependent nausea, vomiting, diarrhea). It is a prescription-pathway investigational drug, not a dietary supplement, and grey-market 'efpeglenatide' is especially risky.
An SGLT2-inhibitor diabetes drug (Invokana) that lowers glucose by excreting it in urine. It extended lifespan in male mice in the NIA aging program, and the SGLT2 class has strong proven cardiovascular, kidney, and heart-failure benefits in humans. Longevity benefit itself is unproven; carries genital-infection and (rarely) ketoacidosis risks. Prescription drug, not a supplement.
An SGLT2-inhibitor diabetes drug (Jardiance) with the strongest human outcome evidence of its class — it cuts cardiovascular death, heart-failure hospitalization, and kidney-disease progression even in non-diabetics. The most widely used SGLT2 for off-label 'longevity,' though longevity itself is unproven (the lifespan data are for sibling canagliflozin in mice). A prescription drug, not a supplement.
This information is for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing any supplement or medication.