Weight loss medication for PCOS

PCOS affects up to 13% of Australian women of reproductive age. Weight gain — particularly around the abdomen — is one of the most frustrating symptoms, driven by insulin resistance and hormonal imbalances. The good news: even 5–10% weight loss can dramatically improve PCOS symptoms, and newer medications are particularly promising.

Why PCOS makes weight loss harder

PCOS creates a metabolic environment that actively promotes weight gain and resists weight loss:

  • Insulin resistance: Up to 70% of women with PCOS have insulin resistance, which promotes fat storage (especially abdominal fat) and makes losing weight through diet alone significantly harder.
  • Hormonal imbalance: Elevated androgens and disrupted sex hormone levels affect metabolism and fat distribution.
  • Inflammation: Chronic low-grade inflammation common in PCOS further disrupts metabolic function.
  • Appetite dysregulation: Hormonal imbalances can increase hunger and cravings.

This is why standard dietary advice often fails for women with PCOS — the biology is working against you. Weight loss medication can address these biological barriers directly.

PCOS lowers the eligibility threshold

Under TGA guidelines, PCOS qualifies as a weight-related comorbidity. This means you may be eligible for weight loss medication at BMI 27 (rather than the standard 30 threshold). If you have PCOS and a BMI of 27 or above, you meet the criteria for prescription weight loss medication.

Which medications help with PCOS?

GLP-1 medications (best option)

Wegovy and Mounjaro are particularly promising for PCOS because they improve insulin sensitivity in addition to promoting weight loss. Clinical studies have shown that GLP-1 treatment in PCOS patients leads to:

  • Improved menstrual regularity
  • Reduced androgen levels (less acne, hair growth)
  • Improved fertility markers
  • Better insulin sensitivity
  • Significant weight loss (especially abdominal fat)

Mounjaro's dual GLP-1/GIP mechanism may offer additional benefits for insulin resistance beyond what semaglutide provides, though head-to-head PCOS-specific data is limited.

Metformin (complementary, not a weight loss drug)

Metformin is commonly prescribed for PCOS to improve insulin resistance. It produces modest weight loss (2–3%) and is often used alongside weight loss medication rather than as an alternative. If you're already on metformin, it can generally be continued alongside GLP-1 medications.

What to discuss with your doctor

  • Your full PCOS diagnosis and current management plan
  • Any fertility goals — weight loss medication must be stopped before conception (2+ months for GLP-1 medications)
  • Current medications including metformin, oral contraceptives, or spironolactone
  • Your BMI and whether you meet the 27+ threshold with PCOS as comorbidity
  • Whether GLP-1 or metformin (or both) is appropriate for your situation

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