A thoughtful senior woman looking out the window.

What Ozempic is doing to women's hormones and why your doctor may not mention it

May 21, 2026
Ivim Health

What Ozempic is doing to women's hormones and why your doctor may not mention it

It鈥檚 a scenario that plays out constantly in Reddit鈥檚 : A woman loses 25 pounds on Ozempic. She鈥檚 done everything right. She expected to feel better.

Instead, she felt worse. Her hot flashes intensified. She was waking up at 2 a.m. and couldn鈥檛 fall back asleep. Her mood was unpredictable in ways it had never been before. She asked her doctor if the medication was causing it. He told her it was probably just the adjustment period.

It wasn鈥檛 the medication. It was her hormones. And no one had warned her that losing weight that quickly could make that happen.

Many women on the forum describe losing weight on GLP-1s only to find themselves asking: Is this my GLP-1, or is this menopause? Often, it鈥檚 both 鈥 and the interaction between the two is something most prescribers aren鈥檛 trained to flag.

Below, 鈥檚 Chief Medical Officer, Dr. Jessica Duncan, examines how rapid weight loss from GLP-1 medications may intersect with hormonal changes during perimenopause and menopause.

What鈥檚 actually happening

Fat tissue produces estrogen. It does this through an enzyme called aromatase, which converts androgens into estrogen. found that aromatase gene expression in adipose tissue is significantly higher in postmenopausal women than in premenopausal women, meaning the body upregulates this process as ovarian production declines. For women in perimenopause, isn鈥檛 a backup system. It becomes the primary source.

Lose fat rapidly 鈥 and GLP-1s can drive significant fat loss, sometimes 20% or more of total body weight 鈥 and you reduce that source. In postmenopausal women, intentional weight loss to produce meaningful reductions in estradiol and increases in SHBG. Whether GLP-1 receptor agonists drive these changes through weight loss alone or via a direct hormonal mechanism remains an open question 鈥 current evidence is largely limited to PCOS populations.

鈥淭his is clinically real and routinely missed,鈥 says Duncan, a board-certified obesity medicine physician and Chief Medical Officer at Ivim Health. 鈥淢ost GLP-1 prescribers are focused on metabolic outcomes, which makes sense. But they鈥檙e not always thinking about what rapid fat loss means hormonally for a woman who鈥檚 already in perimenopause or close to it. Those are not two separate conversations 鈥 they鈥檙e the same conversation.鈥

The perimenopause collision

Women in their 40s and early 50s are already in hormonal flux when many of them start GLP-1 therapy. Estrogen and progesterone are declining naturally. The fat loss doesn鈥檛 cause that decline 鈥 but it can accelerate a shift that was already in motion.

The symptoms that follow are easy to misattribute. Hot flashes worsen. Sleep deteriorates. Mood becomes harder to manage. These look like medication side effects. They look like 鈥渏ust menopause.鈥 They get waved off as normal, temporary, or both 鈥 sometimes all three.

Women in these communities describe it consistently. 鈥淣obody warned me this could happen.鈥 鈥淢y doctor said it was just the adjustment period.鈥 鈥淚 lost the weight I wanted to lose, and I feel worse than before I started.鈥

That gap between what鈥檚 happening and what patients are being told is the problem.

Sleep disruption is one of the most underestimated symptoms 鈥 and one of the most consequential. found strong evidence that the perimenopausal decline in estrogen and progesterone directly drives early-morning awakenings, increased nighttime wakefulness, and reduced total sleep time. Poor sleep raises cortisol, disrupts hunger hormones, and can work against the very progress a patient is trying to make. When a woman on a GLP-1 starts waking at 2 a.m. and can鈥檛 get back to sleep, that鈥檚 not a medication side effect to wait out. It may be a hormonal signal worth investigating.

The same is true for fatigue that rest doesn鈥檛 fix, mood changes that feel out of character, hot flashes that intensify after starting treatment, and a notable drop in libido. None of these in isolation proves a hormonal cause. But the pattern matters.

Why your doctor may not connect the dots

GLP-1 medications were developed and studied primarily through a metabolic lens 鈥 blood sugar, weight, cardiovascular risk. The prescribers writing the most GLP-1 prescriptions right now are often primary care providers and telehealth platforms, not gynecologists or endocrinologists with deep expertise in hormonal health. That鈥檚 not a criticism. It鈥檚 a structural reality. And it鈥檚 why the burden often falls on the patient to ask.

The medications themselves interact with hormonal biology in ways that aren鈥檛 yet well understood. found that endogenous sex hormones 鈥 estrogen in particular 鈥 modulate GLP-1 receptor expression in the hypothalamus, and that women experience both greater weight loss and higher rates of side effects than men on GLP-1 agonists. Biology isn鈥檛 sex-neutral, and the prescribing conversation often is.

鈥淚f I鈥檓 seeing a woman in her 40s starting a GLP-1, I want to know where she is hormonally before we begin,鈥 Duncan says. 鈥淚s she having symptoms of hormonal decline? How is she sleeping? Has she noticed changes in her cycle? I want that baseline, because if we鈥檙e going to drive significant fat loss, I want to understand what that鈥檚 going to mean for her specifically 鈥 not just her weight, but how she鈥檚 going to feel.鈥

That standard 鈥 a hormonal baseline before starting, and monitoring as loss progresses 鈥 is not yet common practice.

What to ask at your next appointment

You don鈥檛 need an extensive workup before starting a GLP-1. But if you鈥檙e a woman in your late 30s through 50s, a few questions are worth raising: Has my hormonal health been factored into this plan? What should I watch for that might indicate a hormonal shift? If I start experiencing sleep disruption, worsening hot flashes, or mood changes, is that something worth investigating?

If labs feel appropriate, relevant markers include but aren鈥檛 limited to estradiol, FSH, and progesterone, ideally timed in relation to your cycle if you鈥檙e still menstruating. Thyroid function is worth ruling out if fatigue and mood changes are prominent.

The bigger picture

, conducted at Mayo Clinic, followed 120 postmenopausal women on tirzepatide for at least 12 months. Women who received concurrent menopause hormone therapy lost 35% more total body weight than those on tirzepatide alone 鈥 17% versus 14% at 15 months 鈥 along with improved cardiometabolic outcomes. It鈥檚 the first published study to evaluate hormone therapy as a modifier of GLP-1 efficacy, and it suggests that treating both systems together produces meaningfully better results than treating either one in isolation.

鈥淲eight loss and hormonal health aren鈥檛 two separate things,鈥 Duncan says. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e deeply connected. And for women especially, treating one without awareness of the other is incomplete medicine. You deserve more than aiming for a number on a scale 鈥 you deserve to actually feel good.鈥

The women on r/Menopause asking, 鈥淚s this the Ozempic or is this menopause?鈥 deserve a real answer. For many of them, it鈥檚 both 鈥 and there鈥檚 more that can be done about it than they鈥檝e been told.

was produced by and reviewed and distributed by 黑料社.


Trending Now