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GLP-1s and Chronic Cough: Analyzing the Data from 2 Million Patient Records

Tony Laughton by Tony Laughton
January 13, 2026
Reading Time: 22 mins read
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Chronic Cough Linked To Glp 1 Agonists Idm

With 2% of patients on GLP-1 receptor agonists developing chronic cough – double the rate of other diabetes medications – you might want to pay attention if you’re using these popular drugs for diabetes or weight loss. Recent research from the Keck School of Medicine examined over 2 million patient records and found something unexpected: your GLP-1 medication could be triggering that persistent cough you’ve been dealing with. And here’s the kicker – up to 75% of reflux-related coughs happen without any stomach symptoms, so you might not even realise the connection. The study showed this risk was especially pronounced with long-acting formulations, and the link got even stronger when researchers excluded patients with known reflux issues… which suggests there’s more going on here than just typical medication side effects.

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Key Takeaways:

  • There’s been a noticeable uptick in chronic cough reports among patients using GLP-1 receptor agonists, and it’s not just the typical GI side effects we’ve been hearing about. This massive study – we’re talking over 2 million patient records – found that people with type 2 diabetes on these medications developed a persistent cough more often than those taking other diabetes drugs. And here’s something interesting… the risk got even stronger when researchers excluded anyone with a history of acid reflux, which suggests there might be something more going on here than just GERD alone.
  • The type of GLP-1 medication you’re taking might actually matter. Long-acting formulations showed a clear association with chronic cough, but short-acting formulations didn’t show the same pattern (though the researchers admit they had limited data on those). So if you’re dealing with a persistent cough on a long-acting GLP-1 drug, this could be worth discussing with your doctor – maybe there are alternatives that won’t trigger the same respiratory issues.
  • Scientists think the vagus nerve might be the culprit here. GLP-1 receptors exist in your respiratory system – in the cells lining your airways and even in lung blood vessels – and these drugs are known to activate vagal nerve signalling. It’s not just about delayed gastric emptying causing reflux… There could be a direct effect on your respiratory tract, causing you to cough. That’s a pretty significant finding because it means the cough isn’t necessarily preventable by just managing acid reflux better.
  • About 2% of patients on GLP-1 RAs developed chronic cough, compared with 1% on other diabetes medications. That might sound small, but when millions of people are taking these drugs for diabetes and weight loss, we’re potentially talking about a lot of people dealing with this annoying and sometimes debilitating symptom. And because up to 75% of people with GERD don’t have typical stomach symptoms, many patients might not realise their cough is related to their medication at all.
  • If you’re experiencing a chronic cough on a GLP-1 medication, don’t panic and stop taking it on your own. Doctors should still investigate other common causes first – asthma, allergies, post-nasal drip, etc. But if nothing else explains your symptoms and you’ve tried aggressive reflux management without improvement, it might be time for an honest conversation with your healthcare provider about whether the benefits of staying on the drug outweigh this side effect. Sometimes a discontinuation trial is the only way to know for sure if the medication is causing your symptoms.

So, What Are GLP-1 Agonists Anyway?

A Quick Overview of These Diabetes Drugs

Chronic Cough Linked To Glp 1 Agonists Hig 1

You’ve probably heard the brand names floating around – Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro. These medications belong to a class called glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists, or GLP-1 RAs for short (because nobody wants to say that mouthful every time). They work by mimicking a hormone your body naturally produces in your gut after you eat. When you take these drugs, they imperatively trick your pancreas into releasing more insulin when your blood sugar rises, while also telling your liver to pump the brakes on glucose production. Pretty clever, right?

But here’s where it gets interesting. These medications don’t just mess with your blood sugar levels. They also slow down how quickly food leaves your stomach – a process called gastric emptying. This delay makes you feel fuller for longer, which is why they’ve become such a big deal in the weight-loss world. The thing is, this same mechanism that helps with appetite control might be behind some unexpected side effects… like that persistent cough we’re talking about.

What They’re Usually Used For

Your doctor might prescribe a GLP-1 agonist as a second-line treatment for type 2 diabetes – meaning it’s typically what they reach for when metformin alone isn’t cutting it anymore. In the study we’re discussing, researchers looked at over 427,000 adults with type 2 diabetes who were prescribed these medications, with an average age of 56 years. These weren’t newly diagnosed patients just starting their diabetes journey. They were people who needed additional help managing their blood sugar levels beyond first-line treatments.

And let’s be real – the weight-loss effects have made these drugs wildly popular beyond just the diabetes community. While they’re FDA-approved for type 2 diabetes management, certain formulations like Wegovy are specifically approved for chronic weight management in people with obesity or weight-related health conditions. The dual benefit of blood sugar control and significant weight loss has created such high demand that there’ve been ongoing shortages. But with all this widespread use comes the need to understand potential side effects that might not have been obvious in initial clinical trials.

The formulation matters too, apparently. The study found that long-acting GLP-1 RAs were specifically associated with increased risk of chronic cough, while short-acting versions weren’t (though the researchers acknowledged they had limited data on the short-acting types). This distinction is important because it suggests the duration of drug exposure in your system might play a role in whether you develop respiratory symptoms. If you’re on a weekly injection rather than a daily dose, you might face different risks.

Chronic Cough – A Surprising Side Effect?

The numbers tell a story that’s hard to ignore. When researchers examined over 2 million patient records, they found that 2% of patients on GLP-1 RAs developed chronic cough – that might sound small, but it’s double the rate seen with other diabetes medications. And here’s where it gets interesting… when they excluded anyone with a history of GERD from the analysis, the association between GLP-1RAs and increased chronic cough risk in type 2 diabetes patients became even more pronounced. So we’re not just talking about reflux causing cough here – there’s something else going on.

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What makes this particularly tricky for you and your doctor is that a chronic cough isn’t exactly rare. It’s one of the most common reasons people visit their physician. But when you’re taking a GLP-1 RA and develop a persistent cough, your healthcare provider might spend months chasing down allergies, asthma, or post-nasal drip before even considering that your diabetes medication could be the culprit. The formulation matters too – long-acting versions of these drugs showed a clear association with chronic cough, while short-acting formulations didn’t show the same pattern (though the researchers admitted they didn’t have enough data on short-acting versions to be completely sure).

How Common Is This Issue?

Before you panic and toss your medication, let’s put this in perspective. The absolute numbers aren’t astronomical – we’re talking about a 1% difference between GLP-1 RAs and other diabetes drugs. That means if 100 people start taking a GLP-1 RA, roughly 2 will develop chronic cough, compared to 1 person out of 100 on alternative medications. But when you consider that millions of people worldwide are now taking these medications for diabetes and weight loss, that 1% difference translates to thousands of people potentially dealing with a nagging cough that won’t quit.

The study’s massive scale – examining records from 70 different healthcare organisations across the US – gives these findings real weight. We’re not talking about a small clinic study here. And the researchers went to great lengths to make sure they were comparing apples to apples, matching patients based on age, sex, smoking status, obesity, heart failure, asthma, COPD, and even whether they were taking ACE inhibitors (which are notorious for causing cough). After all that careful matching, the signal remained clear: GLP-1 RAs carried a higher risk. Interestingly, when compared specifically to SGLT-2 inhibitors (another popular diabetes drug class), the risk difference nearly disappeared… until they removed GERD patients from the equation, at which point it popped right back up.

Who’s Really at Risk?

Your risk profile isn’t one-size-fits-all when it comes to this side effect. The study revealed some patterns worth paying attention to. If you’re taking a long-acting GLP-1 RA – which includes popular medications like semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy) and dulaglutide (Trujicity) – you’re more likely to experience this issue than someone on a short-acting version. And here’s something that might surprise you: if you’ve never had GERD symptoms before, your risk actually appears higher. That seems backwards, right? But it makes sense when you consider that these medications slow stomach emptying, potentially causing silent reflux that presents as a cough rather than heartburn.

The researchers identified several mechanisms that could explain why you might develop this cough. First, there’s the vagal nerve connection – GLP-1 RAs directly stimulate the vagus nerve, which runs from your brainstem down through your chest and controls everything from your heart rate to your cough reflex. Second, scientists have actually

What’s Causing the Cough?

So what’s actually happening inside your body when these medications trigger that persistent cough? Scientists have identified two main culprits, and honestly, they’re both pretty fascinating when you dig into the mechanisms. The researchers behind this study didn’t just identify a statistical link – they explored the biological pathways that might explain why long-acting GLP-1 RAs specifically show this association while short-acting versions don’t seem to cause the same problem.

Your body’s response to these medications isn’t simple. It involves complex interactions between your nervous system, your digestive tract, and even the cells lining your lungs. And here’s what makes this particularly tricky for doctors trying to figure out what’s wrong with you: the cough might show up without any of the typical warning signs you’d expect from the underlying causes.

The Vagal Nerve Factor

Ever wonder why you cough when something tickles the back of your throat? That’s your vagal nerve doing its job. But here’s where things get interesting with GLP-1 medications – previous studies have shown that GLP-1RAs stimulate vagal afferent signalling, which basically means they’re activating this nerve pathway in ways your body wasn’t necessarily expecting. The vagal nerve is like your body’s information superhighway, sending signals between your brain and pretty much every major organ below your neck.

What researchers have discovered is even more intriguing… There are actually GLP-1 receptors present in the respiratory epithelial cells and vasculature of your lungs. So these medications aren’t just working on your pancreas and digestive system – they’re potentially affecting your respiratory system directly. When the vagal nerve gets stimulated by these drugs, it can trigger various afferent signals, and apparently, one of those signals tells your body to cough. It’s a direct pharmacological effect, unrelated to reflux or other secondary causes.

GERD – The Sneaky Culprit

But wait, there’s another mechanism at play that might actually be more common. Gastroesophageal reflux disease, or GERD, is emerging as a major player in this story. And here’s the kicker – as many as 75% of individuals with GERD present without gastrointestinal symptoms yet manifest with other symptoms, such as chronic cough. That means three-quarters of people with reflux don’t even have heartburn or stomach issues. They just… cough.

You might be dealing with acid reflux and not even know it because your stomach feels fine. The researchers noted that patients without gastrointestinal symptoms may not receive a diagnosis until the cough itself prompts an evaluation. So you could be walking around thinking you’ve got some mysterious respiratory condition when really it’s your stomach contents creeping up into your throat while you sleep.

The connection to GLP-1 medications makes this even more complicated because of how these drugs actually work. The pharmacological mechanism of GLP-1 RAs delays gastric emptying – meaning your stomach takes longer to empty its contents. That’s actually part of how these medications help with weight loss and blood sugar control… but it also means there’s more opportunity for stomach acid to splash back up into your esophagus and throat. The study authors specifically suggested that more aggressive reflux management may be needed to achieve symptom control in patients taking these medications. It’s not that you necessarily have worse reflux than someone else – it’s that the medication is making your stomach hold onto its contents longer, giving that acid more chances to cause problems.

My Take on Managing Chronic Cough

If you’re dealing with a persistent cough while on GLP-1 medications, you’re not imagining things – and you’re definitely not alone. Based on the data, about 2% of patients on these medications develop chronic cough, which might sound small until you realise we’re talking about hundreds of thousands of people. The tricky part? Your cough might actually be related to reflux issues that don’t come with the typical heartburn you’d expect. In fact, up to 75% of people with GERD don’t have any stomach symptoms at all – they just cough. And cough. And cough some more.

What makes this particularly frustrating is that GLP-1 medications slow down your stomach emptying by design – that’s part of how they work. But this same mechanism can worsen reflux, which then triggers more coughing. So you might need a more aggressive approach to managing reflux than someone who isn’t on these meds. We’re talking about treating the reflux even when you don’t feel the classic symptoms, because that irritation travelling up to your throat and airways is what’s setting off your cough reflex.

How to Handle Coughing Fits

When a coughing fit hits, your first instinct is probably to reach for water – and that’s actually not a bad move. Sipping slowly can help soothe throat irritation and give you something to focus on besides the cough itself. But here’s what really helps: elevating your upper body if you’re lying down, because keeping stomach contents from creeping up is key when you’re on medications that slow gastric emptying. Some of my patients swear by keeping their head elevated at least 6-8 inches during sleep, and honestly? The data on reflux management support this.

During the day, pay attention to what triggers your fits. Eating too close to bedtime, bending over right after meals, or even wearing tight clothing around your middle can all make things worse. You might also want to keep a cough log for a week or two – sounds tedious, I know, but patterns emerge pretty quickly. Are you coughing more after certain foods? First thing in the morning? Right after taking your medication? These details matter because they tell you (and your doctor) whether we’re dealing with a reflux-related cough or something else entirely.

When to Talk to Your Doctor

Don’t wait until you’ve been coughing for months to bring this up. If your cough has lasted more than 3 weeks and isn’t improving, that’s your signal to schedule an appointment. And if you’re coughing up blood, experiencing significant shortness of breath, or noticing unexplained weight loss along with the cough, stop reading this and call your doctor today. These are red flags that need immediate attention, regardless of whether they’re related to your GLP-1 medication.

The researchers behind this study specifically noted that management should focus on treating reflux more aggressively in GLP-1 users, so your doctor might suggest medications or lifestyle changes you haven’t tried yet. But here’s the thing – if standard reflux treatments aren’t working after a reasonable trial period, you and your doctor need to have an honest conversation about whether staying on the GLP-1 medication makes sense for your situation. It’s a risk-benefit discussion you can make alone, weighing how much the medication is helping your diabetes or weight management against how much the cough is affecting your quality of life.

Sometimes a “discontinuation trial” – basically stopping the medication temporarily to see if the cough improves – is the only way to know for sure if the GLP-1 is the culprit. Your doctor might suggest this if other causes have been ruled out and reflux treatments haven’t helped. It’s not giving up on your treatment plan… It’s being smart about finding what actually works for your body. Managing your diabetes shouldn’t mean you can’t sleep through the night or have a conversation without coughing.

Should You Be Worried?

Here’s where the numbers actually matter. Only 2% of patients on GLP-1 RAs developed chronic cough – that’s a pretty small slice of the pie when you’re looking at over 400,000 people in the study. Compare that to the 1% who got chronic cough on other diabetes meds, and yeah, there’s a difference… but we’re talking about a single percentage point here. Your doctor prescribed these medications because your diabetes or weight posed real, measurable health risks. Heart disease, stroke, and kidney failure – those aren’t minor inconveniences.

But let’s not downplay what a chronic cough actually means for your daily life. Anyone who’s dealt with a persistent cough knows it’s not just annoying – it disrupts your sleep, makes meetings awkward, and can seriously impact your quality of life. The tricky part? The link was strongest with long-acting GLP-1 RAs, while short-acting versions didn’t show the same association (though the researchers admit they didn’t have enough data on short-acting versions to be totally sure). So if you’re on Ozempic, Wegovy, or Mounjaro and you’ve developed this nagging cough that won’t quit, you’re not imagining things.

Weighing Risks vs. Benefits

Your diabetes doesn’t care about statistics – it’s actively damaging your body right now if it’s not controlled. GLP-1 RAs have revolutionised diabetes management and weight loss for good reason. They lower blood sugar, reduce cardiovascular risk, and help people lose significant weight when nothing else works. We’re talking about medications that have literally changed lives and prevented heart attacks, strokes, and early deaths. A chronic cough is miserable, sure, but uncontrolled diabetes can cost you your vision, your kidneys, or your legs.

That said, you’re the one living in your body every day. If you’ve developed a persistent cough since starting these meds and it’s making your life hell, that’s valid. The researchers noted that more aggressive reflux management might help, since these drugs already slow gastric emptying. And here’s something interesting: when they excluded people with a history of GERD from the analysis, the association between GLP-1 RAs and chronic cough actually strengthened. That suggests the cough isn’t just about reflux for everyone… There might be something else going on with how these drugs interact with your respiratory system.

Making an Informed Decision

Your next doctor’s appointment needs to be a real conversation, not just a prescription refill. Bring up the cough if you’ve got one – don’t wait for your doctor to ask about it. Many patients don’t connect their new cough to their diabetes medication because, well, who thinks about that? Your doctor might want to try treating you for reflux first, especially if you’ve got other symptoms that point in that direction. The study authors specifically stated that standard reflux treatment should be the first approach when it makes clinical sense.

And if the reflux treatment doesn’t work? That’s when things get more complicated. The researchers acknowledged that for refractory cases, you and your doctor might need to discuss a trial period off the medication to see if the cough resolves. But this isn’t a decision you make alone or suddenly – these medications need to be tapered properly, and you’ll need a backup plan for managing your diabetes or weight. Your individual situation matters here: how well controlled is your diabetes on this medication? What other options have you tried? How severe is the cough actually impacting your life?

Don’t forget that this study had limitations too. They couldn’t track whether people actually took their meds consistently, what doses they were on, or how long they’d been taking them. They relied on diagnosis codes rather than actually measuring how bad people’s coughs were. So while the link is real and statistically significant across hundreds of thousands of patients, there’s still a lot we don’t know about who’s most at risk and why some people develop this side effect while others don’t.

The Bottom Line – Recap of the Findings

The numbers tell a pretty straightforward story here. Out of over 427,000 patients taking GLP-1 RAs, 2% developed chronic cough – that’s double the rate seen with other diabetes medications. And here’s what makes this finding particularly noteworthy: when researchers removed participants with a history of GERD from the analysis, the association actually strengthened. That’s the opposite of what you’d expect if this were just about reflux issues we already knew about.

Your medication formulation matters too, apparently. Long-acting GLP-1 RAs showed a clear link to chronic cough, while short-acting versions didn’t – though the researchers admit they didn’t have enough data on short-acting formulations to be totally confident about that second part. What this means for you if you’re on one of these medications: don’t panic if you develop a persistent cough, but definitely don’t ignore it either. Your doctor needs to know, especially if the usual suspects (like postnasal drip or asthma) aren’t explaining what’s going on. The study involved data from 70 healthcare organisations spanning nearly two decades, so we’re talking about a robust dataset here… but it’s still observational research with its limitations. They couldn’t track actual medication compliance or dosing patterns, which would’ve been helpful. Still, with over 2 million patient records analysed, the signal’s strong enough to warrant attention.

Conclusion

Summing up, if you’re taking GLP-1 receptor agonists for diabetes or weight loss, you need to be aware that chronic cough might not just be a random annoyance – it could actually be linked to your medication. This massive study involving over 2 million patients shows a clear association between these popular drugs and persistent coughing, especially with the long-acting formulations. And here’s what makes this tricky… the cough might be caused by reflux issues you don’t even realise you have, since most people with GERD don’t experience the typical heartburn symptoms. Your body’s vagal nerve could be getting stimulated by the medication, or those GLP-1 receptors sitting in your lung tissue might be playing a role, too.

So what does this mean for you practically? If you’ve developed a nagging cough since starting a GLP-1 agonist, don’t just brush it off. Bring it up with your doctor – whether that’s your primary care physician or an ear, nose, and throat specialist. They should work through the usual suspects first (allergies, asthma, other respiratory issues), but if nothing else fits, your medication might be the culprit. Treatment might involve more aggressive reflux management, given how these drugs slow down your stomach emptying, or in some cases, you and your doctor might need to have an honest conversation about whether the benefits of continuing the medication outweigh this side effect. Because at the end of the day, your treatment plan should work for your whole body, not just your blood sugar or weight.

FAQ

Q: What percentage of patients on GLP-1 medications actually develop chronic cough?

A: About 2% of patients taking GLP-1 receptor agonists developed chronic cough in this large study, which might sound small, but it’s actually double the rate seen with other diabetes medications. When you’re talking about millions of people using these drugs for diabetes and weight loss, that 2% translates to a lot of folks dealing with a persistent, annoying cough. And here’s the thing – this number might even be higher in real life because some people probably don’t connect their new cough to their medication, especially if they don’t have any stomach issues to clue them in.

Q: Why would a diabetes or weight-loss drug cause coughing in the first place?

A: Scientists think there are a couple of ways these medications might trigger chronic cough, and it gets pretty interesting. First off, GLP-1 drugs slow down how fast your stomach empties, which can lead to acid reflux – and here’s the kicker, up to 75% of people with reflux don’t even have heartburn or stomach symptoms. They just cough. So you might have reflux causing your cough without realising it. But there’s also a more direct route… these drugs activate the vagus nerve (the big nerve connecting your brain to your digestive system and lungs), and researchers have actually found GLP-1 receptors sitting right there in your lung tissue and airways. Your body’s basically getting signals from the medication itself that can trigger coughing.

Q: Does it matter whether I’m taking Ozempic, Wegovy, or one of the other GLP-1 drugs?

A: Yes, apparently the type of GLP-1 medication makes a real difference here. Long-acting versions of these drugs – the ones you typically inject once weekly – showed a clear link to chronic cough in the study. But short-acting GLP-1 medications didn’t show the same association, though the researchers admitted they didn’t have enough data on short-acting versions to be totally sure about that finding. This makes sense when you think about it… a medication that stays in your system longer has more time to potentially irritate things. If you’re dealing with a persistent cough on a long-acting GLP-1, it might be worth discussing alternatives with your doctor.

Q: Should I stop taking my GLP-1 medication if I develop a chronic cough?

A: Don’t just quit your medication without talking to your doctor first – that’s really important. The researchers emphasised that doctors should still look for the usual causes of chronic cough first, because there are lots of reasons people cough that have nothing to do with their diabetes medication. Allergies, asthma, other medications (especially ACE inhibitors for blood pressure), infections… the list goes on. Your doctor will want to rule those out and try treating any reflux you might have before considering stopping the GLP-1 drug. Because let’s be honest, these medications can be life-changing for diabetes control and weight loss. But if you’ve tried everything else and the cough is really affecting your quality of life, then yeah, having a conversation about whether the benefits still outweigh this side effect makes total sense.

Q: How can doctors tell if my cough is really from the GLP-1 medication or something else?

A: This is where it gets tricky because there’s no simple test that says “yep, it’s definitely the medication.” Doctors basically have to play detective and rule out other causes first – they’ll check for asthma, look at what other medications you’re taking, evaluate you for reflux even if your stomach feels fine, and make sure there’s nothing else going on in your lungs or airways. The study authors specifically noted that when the usual suspects don’t align with what they’re seeing clinically, GLP-1-related cough should move higher on the list of possibilities. And if you’re being treated for reflux but the cough won’t budge despite aggressive treatment, that’s another clue. Some patients might need to do a trial period off the medication to see if the cough improves – but again, that’s a decision you’d make together with your doctor based on

Tags: ChronicCoughGLP-1
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Tony Laughton

Tony Laughton

Tony Laughton is Meducate’s CTO and a core member of the writing team. Combining technical expertise with a passion for clear, evidence-based communication, he helps shape Meducate’s digital platforms while contributing engaging, accessible health content for professionals and the public alike.

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