ON
← Back to feed
United KingdomSports2 days ago

The latest benefit of obesity drugs: boosting testosterone and sperm quality

A preliminary study suggests that GLP-1 medications, used to treat obesity, may improve sperm quality in men by increasing or stabilizing testosterone levels. The findings were presented at the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting and are based on a systematic review of five randomized controlled trials. More research is needed to confirm these results.

NEWS

15 June 2026

Preliminary study finds that testosterone levels increase or stabilize in people taking GLP-1 medications.

By

Mariana Lenharo

Mariana Lenharo is a reporter for Nature in New York City.

Sperm quality improved in men with obesity after a course of GLP-1 drugs. Credit: Steve Gschmeissner/SPL

The latest generation of obesity drugs might have another potential benefit: improving fertility in men. A systematic review presented today at the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Chicago, Illinois, suggests that GLP-1 medications might increase testosterone levels and help to improve the quality of sperm in men with obesity.

The evidence is still preliminary, and more robust trials are needed to confirm the association, says review co-author Pratibha Natesh, an endocrinologist at Warwick Medical School in Coventry, UK. But emerging evidence from other sources points in the same direction.

Perfect sperm

Most of the next-generation obesity drugs that have come on the market in the past five years work by binding to the same receptor as a natural hormone called glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1), creating a feeling of fullness . To learn how the drugs affect male fertility, Natesh and her colleagues searched the literature for randomized controlled trials of GLP-1 drugs that included measurements of testosterone levels in men. They found only five studies.

(This article uses ‘men’ to reflect the language used in the review and other studies, while recognizing that not all people who have sperm identify themselves as men.)

In one study 1 , for example, 30 men with low testosterone levels, a condition known as hypogonadism, and obesity were assigned to receive either a GLP-1 drug or testosterone replacement therapy (TRT) at random. At the end of 16 weeks, the testosterone levels of both groups had risen.

How to keep weight off after obesity drugs

Another study 2 randomly assigned 25 men with type 2 diabetes and hypogonadism to receive either a GLP-1 drug or TRT. After 24 weeks, testosterone levels increased in both groups, although the increase was greater among those receiving TRT. In the GLP-1 group, however, sperm quality improved. The percentage of morphologically typical sperm — those with a perfect shape and size — went from 2% at the start of the study to 4% by the end. In the TRT group, sperm count and quality declined, which is expected during this type of therapy.

The other three studies 3 , 4 , 5 included in the review involved healthy men receiving GLP-1 medications for short periods of time and showed that the drugs had no effect on testosterone levels.

Testosterone boost

The findings of the systematic review are supported by other studies, including research presented last month at the American Urological Association annual meeting in Washington DC by Andrés Guillén-Lozoya, a physician at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota. Guillén-Lozoya and his colleagues analysed the electronic health records of more than 1,600 men who had been prescribed obesity drugs and found that participants’ testosterone levels increased by around 30% after treatment with either a GLP-1 drug or a drug that mimics both GLP-1 and a separate hormone called glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide.

doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/d41586-026-01867-0

References

Jensterle, M., Podbregar, A., Goricar, K., Gregoric, N. & Janez, A. Endocr. Connect. 8 , 195–202 (2019).

Article

PubMed

Google Scholar

Gregorič, N., Šikonja, J., Janež, A. & Jensterle, M. Diabetes Obes. Metab. 27 , 519–528 (2025).

Article

PubMed

Google Scholar

Jeibmann, A., Zahedi, S., Simoni, M., Nieschlag, E. & Byrne, M. M. Eur. J. Clin. Invest. 35 , 565–572 (2005).

Article

PubMed

Google Scholar

Izzi-Engbeaya, C. et al. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab . 105 , 1119–1125 (2020).

Article

PubMed

Google Scholar

Lengsfeld, S. et al. EBioMedicine 107 , 105284 (2024).

Article

PubMed

Google Scholar

Portillo-Canales, S. et al. Endocr. Pract. 32 , 696–703 (2026).

Article

PubMed

Google Scholar

Download references

Related Articles

Testosterone therapy is trending. Who really needs it, and why?

Does Ozempic boost fertility? What the science says

A dad’s diet affects his sperm — and his sons’ health

Lab-grown sperm and eggs: ‘epigenetic’ reset in human cells paves the way

How to keep weight off after obesity drugs

Why do obesity drugs seem to treat so many other ailments?

Subjects

Latest on:

Obesity doesn’t equate to ill health: why the ‘disease’ label doesn’t always fit

Comment 01 JUN 26

A deep-learning framework reveals whole-body perturbations at cell level

Article 20 MAY 26

Obesity has risen in all countries — but at a faster pace in poorer ones

News & Views 13 MAY 26

Is the peptide craze backed by science? The promise behind the hype

News Feature 10 JUN 26

Let’s talk about biomedical research kits

Career Column 09 JUN 26

This mysterious lung disease affects millions of people — but a drug tested in…

Read the full article at Nature News
Source document: The latest benefit of obesity drugs: boosting testosterone and sperm quality

2 reports

Nature NewsParty-alignedCenter2 days ago
Briefing Chat: Testosterone and sperm might get a boost from obesity drugs

This article discusses preliminary research findings on the potential effects of GLP-1 drugs on male fertility, specifically their possible role in increasing testosterone levels and improving sperm quality. It also mentions a two-year trial involving a brain-computer interface.

Bias read (Center): The article presents preliminary scientific findings without overtly favoring any particular perspective. It does not include explicit ideological language, biased sourcing, or omissions that would indicate a clear leaning. The content remains focused on presenting research outcomes neutrally.

Nature NewsParty-alignedCenter6 days ago
The latest benefit of obesity drugs: boosting testosterone and sperm quality

A preliminary study suggests that GLP-1 medications, used to treat obesity, may improve sperm quality in men by increasing or stabilizing testosterone levels. The findings were presented at the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting and are based on a systematic review of five randomized controlled trials. More research is needed to confirm these results.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a scientific finding without overtly favoring any political perspective. It emphasizes the preliminary nature of the study and calls for further research, maintaining neutrality.

Official sources cited

  • organisation Endocrine Society’s annual meeting

Go to the primary sources (2)

The official sources this coverage is built on. Read them directly to bypass framing.