GLP-1 receptor agonists cause 21–45% of total weight lost to come from lean mass — a proportion comparable to non-pharmacologic caloric restriction at similar deficits. This is a caloric deficit effect, not a unique GLP-1 toxicity, but the absolute impact is larger in older adults, CKD patients, and sedentary individuals. The only evidence-supported preservation strategies are resistance training ≥3×/week and protein intake of 2.0–2.5 g/kg/day. No pharmacologic agent except bimagrumab has human lean-gain evidence, and bimagrumab’s obesity Phase 3 path is uncertain.
Lean Mass Fraction of Weight Lost
Source
Lean Mass as % of Total Weight Lost
Evidence Grade
GLP-1 RA systematic review
21–40%
Confirmed (PMID:40289060)
STEP 1 DEXA subset (semaglutide 2.4 mg, 68 wk)
~45% (6.92 kg LST / 15.3 kg total)
Supported (PMCID:PMC8089287)
Network meta-analysis (Coutinho et al.)
~25%
Supported
Retatrutide Phase 2
”Largely preserved” but lean fraction up to ~40% class range expected
Supported (Lancet Diabetol 2025)
The commonly cited 25–35% range understates what some trials show (STEP 1: ~45%). The actual fraction depends on:
Protein intake during therapy
Concurrent resistance training
Dose and duration
Patient population (older = higher fraction)
Important framing
The lean mass loss is proportional to the caloric deficit — it is not a unique GLP-1 toxicity. Non-pharmacologic caloric restriction at comparable deficits produces a similar lean fraction. The concern is that GLP-1-induced deficits are large and sustained, making the absolute lean mass impact clinically significant.