Last reviewed: June 23, 2026
Last updated: June 23, 2026
Written by:
Jay Hastings,
CEO of PlexusDx
Jay Hastings is the CEO of PlexusDx, a precision health company focused on genetic testing, blood biomarker insights, and personalized wellness recommendations. He has more than 20 years of experience across healthcare innovation, genomics, laboratory operations, healthcare investing, and strategic finance.
Medically reviewed by:
Jayden Lee, PharmD, EMBA
Jayden Lee, PharmD, EMBA, is the PlexusDx Medical Science Liaison with a PharmD and MBA specializing in pharmacogenomics and clinical product development, with a proven ability to bridge the gap between genomic research and practical patient outcomes. Dr. Lee has more than 10 years of professional experience in clinical pharmacy, academia, and research.
This article is part of the PlexusDx Education Hub — science-backed guidance on GLP-1 medications, metabolic health, and precision weight management.
Semaglutide works by slowing stomach emptying and signaling fullness to your brain, making it one of the most effective weight-loss medications available. However, because it affects how your digestive system works, some medications may not work as intended when taken alongside it. Knowing which drugs require caution—and which ones you should avoid—protects your health and ensures your treatment succeeds.
How Semaglutide Changes Drug Absorption in Your Body
Semaglutide slows gastric emptying, meaning food and liquids stay in your stomach longer before moving into your small intestine. This mechanism is what creates the satiety effect that drives weight loss. However, when medications are taken by mouth, they also need to pass through your stomach and be absorbed in your intestines at normal rates. Delayed gastric emptying can change how quickly your body absorbs oral medications, potentially lowering their blood levels below therapeutic doses.
Some medications depend on rapid, consistent absorption to work properly. Diabetes pills, certain antibiotics, and heart medications may become less effective if they sit in your stomach longer than expected. Others might accumulate to higher-than-safe levels if absorption is unpredictable. This is why your doctor or PlexusDx care team should review your full medication list before you start semaglutide therapy.
Oral Medications at Higher Risk of Interaction with Semaglutide
Diabetes medications are among the most critical to monitor. Sulfonylureas (like glyburide) and meglitinides (like repaglinide) cause your pancreas to release insulin, which can lead to dangerously low blood sugar when combined with semaglutide. Sodium-glucose cotransporter inhibitors (SGLT2 inhibitors) carry a rare but serious risk of diabetic ketoacidosis. If you take any diabetes pill, your prescriber must adjust doses or switch you to safer alternatives before starting semaglutide.
Birth control pills and hormone medications may lose effectiveness because delayed stomach emptying affects their absorption timing. Oral contraceptives work best when absorbed consistently; if you take them, discuss backup contraception methods with your doctor during semaglutide treatment. Certain antibiotics—particularly fluoroquinolones and tetracyclines—also depend on steady absorption rates. Bisphosphonates for bone health require an empty stomach and specific timing; semaglutide interferes with both requirements.
Medications That May Need Dosage Adjustments or Monitoring
Heart and blood pressure medications often fall into a gray zone: they may still work, but their blood levels could shift unpredictably. ACE inhibitors, beta-blockers, and calcium channel blockers should be monitored by your cardiologist, who may need to check your blood pressure more frequently or adjust doses. Some patients find they need lower doses as weight loss progresses anyway, independent of semaglutide's effects on absorption.
Thyroid medications (levothyroxine) are particularly sensitive to absorption changes because they require precise, consistent dosing. Taking thyroid medication at least 30 minutes before eating—and ideally 4 hours apart from other medications—becomes even more critical on semaglutide. Your doctor may recommend more frequent thyroid function tests during the first few months of treatment. If you take any psychiatric medications like SSRIs or antipsychotics, inform your PlexusDx care team; most are safe but benefit from baseline documentation.
Medications Generally Safe to Take with Semaglutide
Injectable medications bypass the stomach entirely, so they're unaffected by semaglutide's gastric effects. Insulin injections, SGLT2 inhibitors (when injected), GLP-1 injectables (like semaglutide itself), and other injectables maintain their absorption whether or not you're on semaglutide. This is one reason some patients switch from oral to injectable formulations of their other medications while on semaglutide therapy. Over-the-counter pain relievers like acetaminophen and ibuprofen are generally tolerated, though stomach irritation from NSAIDs may feel worse due to slower digestion.
Most vitamins, minerals, and supplements are safe, though absorption of fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K) may decrease slightly because semaglutide reduces fat intake and slows overall absorption. Many patients benefit from a daily multivitamin during weight loss. Antacids and anti-nausea medications (like ondansetron) are often used alongside semaglutide without interaction. Always inform your PlexusDx provider about supplements, herbal products, and over-the-counter drugs so they can document and monitor your complete regimen.
How to Safely Manage Your Medications on Semaglutide
Start by creating a complete list of every medication, supplement, and over-the-counter product you take—including brand names, doses, and frequency. Bring this list to your first PlexusDx consultation or upload it through the patient portal before beginning semaglutide. Your care team will flag interactions, recommend timing adjustments, or suggest safer alternatives. Some patients benefit from spacing oral medications 2-4 hours away from meals, since slower stomach emptying also slows how quickly you eat.
Monitor your health closely in the first 4-6 weeks after starting semaglutide. If you take diabetes medication and experience unusual fatigue, shakiness, or confusion, these could signal low blood sugar—contact your doctor immediately. If a chronic condition worsens or a medication seems less effective, report it to PlexusDx rather than adjusting doses yourself. Keep a simple log noting any symptoms or changes in how your other medications feel; this helps your care team fine-tune your regimen and prevents serious complications from developing silently.
Understanding PlexusDx Precision Peptide Testing for Personalized Safety
PlexusDx offers the Precision Peptide Genetic Test—a $99 add-on available after your first month of semaglutide treatment—that reveals how your unique genetic makeup influences medication response. The test examines 14 pathways and 49 peptides, including key variants like GLP1R rs6923761, GIPR rs1800437, and FTO rs9939609 that affect how your body processes weight-loss medications and related compounds. Understanding your genetic profile helps your PlexusDx team predict which medications you metabolize quickly versus slowly, informing safer dosing decisions for your other prescriptions.
If you carry genetic variants that slow medication metabolism, your doctor knows to start other drugs at lower doses or monitor blood levels more carefully. Conversely, if you're a rapid metabolizer, standard doses of certain medications might be ineffective, prompting earlier dose adjustments. This personalized approach reduces trial-and-error adjustments and catches potential interactions before they cause problems. Combined with PlexusDx's licensed 503A compounding pharmacy partnerships, genetic insight lets your care team optimize both your semaglutide dose and your broader medication regimen.
How Your Genetics Influence GLP-1 Response
Not everyone responds to GLP-1 medications the same way. Genetic variants — including GIPR rs1800437, GLP1R rs6923761, FTO rs9939609, and MC4R rs17782313 — influence how your body processes these medications, how much weight you lose, and how you tolerate side effects. PlexusDx maps 14 pathways, 49 peptides, and 150+ genetic insights to match each patient to the right medication, dose, and lifestyle protocol for their biology. The PlexusDx Precision Peptide Genetic Test ($99 add-on after your first month of treatment) gives your provider precise insight into your peptide genetic predispositions before the first prescription is written.
Access Personalized GLP-1 Care Through PlexusDx
PlexusDx offers six prescription GLP-1 protocols to all 50 states — no membership, no insurance required, async intake or live consult. The Semaglutide Injection starts at $149/mo. Medications are dispensed from licensed 503A compounding pharmacies following strict quality and safety standards. Add a Precision Peptide Genetic Test for $99 to personalize your protocol from day one.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I take my diabetes medication with semaglutide?
It depends on which diabetes drug you take. Sulfonylureas and meglitinides carry a high risk of dangerously low blood sugar and may need to be stopped. Metformin and SGLT2 inhibitors are often safe but require careful monitoring and possible dose adjustments. Your PlexusDx care team will review your diabetes regimen before you start semaglutide and coordinate with your endocrinologist to prevent complications.
Will semaglutide make my birth control less effective?
Semaglutide may reduce how quickly your oral contraceptive is absorbed due to slower stomach emptying. The pill may remain effective, but backup contraception is prudent during the first months. Discuss switching to an injection, patch, or intrauterine device with your gynecologist, or ask about spacing your birth control pill several hours away from meals and other medications.
How much does compounded semaglutide cost at PlexusDx?
PlexusDx Compounded Semaglutide Injection starts at $149 per month with no flat per-compound pricing increases—your dose may need to go up, but your price won't. The medication is prepared by licensed 503A compounding pharmacies, requires no insurance, and is HSA/FSA eligible, making it accessible across all 50 states.
What are the signs that a medication interaction is happening?
Warning signs include unexplained fatigue, dizziness, or shakiness (possible low blood sugar if you take diabetes meds); return of symptoms your medication normally controls; unusual nausea or stomach pain; or unexpected changes in heart rate or blood pressure. Contact your PlexusDx provider or emergency services immediately if you experience severe symptoms. Mild interactions may cause no obvious signs, which is why regular monitoring during the first weeks is essential.
Can the Precision Peptide Genetic Test help predict medication interactions?
Yes. The Precision Peptide Genetic Test ($99, available after your first month of semaglutide) examines 14 pathways and 150+ genetic insights, including variants in GLP1R and GIPR that influence how you metabolize GLP-1 compounds and related medications. This personalized data helps your PlexusDx team adjust other prescriptions more safely and predict which interactions you're most at risk for, reducing complications.
Related Reading
Pricing and availability current as of June 2026. Compounded GLP-1 medications are not FDA-approved drug products; they are prepared by licensed compounding pharmacies under federal compounding regulations. Compounded semaglutide and tirzepatide are not the same as Wegovy, Ozempic, Zepbound, or Mounjaro. This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Consult a licensed healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing any medication.
Return to the PlexusDx Education Hub for more evidence-based resources on GLP-1 therapy, metabolic health, and personalized weight management.
Medical and Editorial Standards
Medical review process: This article was reviewed for medical accuracy, scientific clarity, evidence alignment, and appropriate discussion of genetics, medications, supplements, biomarkers, and health-related claims.
Sources and evidence: PlexusDx educational content is developed using peer-reviewed research, clinical literature, reputable medical references, and, where applicable, public health or regulatory guidance.
Commercial transparency: PlexusDx offers genetic testing, blood biomarker testing, personalized supplement recommendations, and related precision wellness services. Product mentions are intended to help readers understand available options and should not be interpreted as medical advice.
Important disclaimer: PlexusDx educational content is for informational purposes only and should not be used as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult a qualified healthcare provider before making decisions about medications, supplements, genetic testing, lab testing, or health-related care.
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