This Medication Was Linked To A 56% Lower Risk Of Breast Cancer Recurrence
A widely used medication class may dramatically improve breast cancer survival odds.
Image by Javier Díez / Stocksy May 27, 2026 Breast cancer is the most common cancer among women in the U.S., making up more than 30% of all cases. And people who are also managing obesity or type 2 diabetes are at higher risk of complications (including the cancer coming back). Now, a large study1 suggests that GLP-1 medications, the drug class that includes semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy) and tirzepatide (Mounjaro, Zepbound), may offer real benefits for breast cancer survivors who have these metabolic conditions. Here's what you need to know.
About the study
Researchers wanted to better understand whether taking a GLP-1 was associated with breast cancer outcomes in women with obesity or diabetes.
Researchers looked at health records from more than 841,000 women with stage I to III breast cancer across 68 U.S. health care organizations. They compared outcomes for people who used GLP-1 medications versus those who didn't, as well as those taking other diabetes drugs like insulin, metformin, or SGLT2 inhibitors.
The researchers specifically looked at:
Patients were followed for up to 10 years.
The benefits of GLP-1 use
Women with breast cancer who were taking GLP-1 medications tended to have better long-term outcomes, especially those with obesity or type 2 diabetes.
When researchers compared GLP-1s to SGLT2 inhibitors (another newer diabetes drug class), they didn't see significant differences, suggesting both may offer similar benefits.
For women with obesity using GLP-1s, survival rates were 97.4% at 5 years and 96.0% at 10 years, compared to 93.2% and 88.6% for non-users.
Why obesity affects breast cancer outcomes
The link between carrying extra weight and cancer risk is well established. Obesity creates conditions in the body that can help tumors grow, including ongoing inflammation, insulin resistance (when your cells don't respond well to insulin), and higher estrogen levels (since fat tissue produces estrogen).
For breast cancer specifically, having obesity at diagnosis or gaining weight during treatment is tied to higher recurrence rates and lower survival.
How GLP-1s might help
GLP-1 medications were originally developed for type 2 diabetes and later approved for weight loss. Their potential benefits for cancer survivors likely go beyond the scale:
What we still don't know
This was an observational study, not a clinical trial, so it can't prove that GLP-1s directly caused the better outcomes. A few things could be influencing the results:
The researchers are calling for clinical trials to better understand the potential risks and best timing for GLP-1 therapy in breast cancer survivors.
What survivors can do now
If you're a breast cancer survivor with obesity or type 2 diabetes, this research adds to growing evidence that metabolic health matters for cancer outcomes.
While GLP-1s aren't approved specifically for cancer treatment, they may be worth discussing with your care team if you're already a candidate for weight management or diabetes treatment.
Some questions to ask your oncologist or primary care provider:
Lifestyle habits that support metabolic health
Whether or not medication is part of your plan, lifestyle factors remain the foundation for both metabolic health and cancer survivorship:
The takeaway
This new, large study found that GLP-1 medications were linked to significantly better survival and lower cancer recurrence among breast cancer survivors with obesity or type 2 diabetes. While clinical trials are needed to confirm these findings, the research suggests that metabolic health plays an important role in cancer outcomes, and that GLP-1 medications may offer benefits beyond weight loss and blood sugar control.
JimMin