GLP-1, based treatments are getting a lot of attention for eating disorders like bulimia nervosa (BN) and binge eating disorder (BED)—but their role is still evolving and not yet standard care. Here’s a clear breakdown.
What is GLP-1 and why it matters
GLP-1 (glucagon-like peptide-1) is a gut hormone that:
- Signals fullness (satiety) to the brain
- Slows gastric emptying (you feel full longer)
- Reduces food reward/cravings via brain pathways (especially dopamine circuits)
Medications like semaglutide and liraglutide mimic this hormone.
GLP-1s in Binge Eating Disorder (BED)
Potential benefits
- Reduced binge frequency
GLP-1s can blunt the intense drive to overeat by increasing satiety and decreasing cravings. - Improved control over eating
Patients often report fewer “loss of control” episodes. - Weight loss (secondary benefit)
Helpful in BED when obesity is also present, but not the primary treatment goal.
Evidence so far
- Small studies and clinical observations suggest meaningful reductions in binge episodes
- Some overlap with mechanisms targeted by medications like lisdexamfetamine (FDA-approved for BED)
Limitations
- Not FDA-approved specifically for BED
- Long-term psychiatric effects are still being studied
GLP-1s in Bulimia Nervosa (BN)
This is more complex.
Possible benefits
- May reduce binge urges (similar to BED)
- Could indirectly reduce binge–purge cycles
Major concerns
- Does NOT treat core psychological drivers (e.g., body image distress, compensatory behaviors)
- Risk of:
- Masking symptoms rather than treating the disorder
- Reinforcing weight/shape preoccupation
- Unknown impact on purging behaviors (vomiting, laxatives)
Because of these concerns, GLP-1s are not considered standard or first-line treatment for BN.
Mechanisms relevant to both disorders
GLP-1s act on both homeostatic and hedonic eating systems:
- Homeostatic (hunger/fullness):
- Hypothalamus → reduces hunger signals
- Hedonic (reward/craving):
- Mesolimbic dopamine system → lowers “food addiction–like” drive
This dual action is why they’re being explored in compulsive eating conditions.
Current clinical position
Not first-line treatment
Standard treatments remain:
- Psychotherapy
- Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT-E) is gold standard
- Medications
- fluoxetine (FDA-approved for bulimia)
- lisdexamfetamine (for BED)
GLP-1s may be considered:
- In BED with obesity, when:
- Traditional treatments are insufficient
- There’s significant metabolic risk
- In research or carefully monitored off-label use
Risks and cautions
- Gastrointestinal side effects (nausea, vomiting)
- Potential worsening of restrictive eating patterns
- Limited data in patients with active eating disorders
- Requires close psychiatric + medical supervision
Bottom line
- BED: Promising adjunct—may reduce binge frequency and cravings
- Bulimia: Experimental and controversial—use cautiously
- Overall: GLP-1s target appetite biology, but eating disorders are biopsychosocial, so medication alone is not enough








