India to tackle global obesity with cheap fat-loss jabs
A medicine distributor displays Mounjaro (tirzepatide) self-injecting GLP-1 prefilled pens at his office in Thane on March 20, 2026. Photo by INDRANIL MUKHERJEE / AFP
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A deluge of weight‑loss drugs is set to transform the global
fight against obesity as India prepares to unleash low‑cost generic versions of
injections like Ozempic after a key patent expired Friday.
The move will dramatically widen access to treatments that
have long been considered a luxury, especially in middle-income countries,
where soaring demand has collided with steep prices.
At clinics across Mumbai, doctors say they are already
preparing for an influx in new patients.
More than 50 people walk into endocrinologist Nadeem Rais's
office every week seeking weight-loss injections.
"We have around 70 to 80 patients on active treatment
right now," he told AFP.
"When generics come out and prices drop, that could go
up to 200 easily."
His colleague Sunera Ghai agrees saying that demand is
"very high" but many "probably aren't taking it just because it
is truly a luxury item at this point".
The breakthrough comes as patents on semaglutide -- the
active ingredient in drugs such as Ozempic and Wegovy -- expired
Friday in India, the world's largest supplier of generic medicines.
By the end of 2026, core patents on semaglutide will have
expired in 10 countries that represent 48 percent of the global obesity burden,
according to a study published earlier this month by researchers.
These include Brazil, China, South Africa, Turkey and
Canada, the study said.
For India's drug giants, this marks the start of an
aggressive new race.
At least four major firms have already prepared generic
semaglutide injections, regulatory filings and compliance documents viewed by
AFP show.
Some, including Zydus Lifesciences, have announced "Day
1" launches, suggesting generic versions may become available as soon as
this weekend in India.
Research firm Pharmarack estimates the Indian market will
soon be flooded with options.
"What we understand is, there will be more than 50
brands that will be launched in the market and there are more than 40 players
who will be launching these drugs," Pharmarack's vice president Sheetal
Sapale said.
While the country still accounts for a third of the world's
undernutrition according to the World Health Organization (WHO), rising incomes
and urban lifestyles have pushed obesity rates sharply upward.
Government data released last March shows 24 percent of
women and 23 percent of men are overweight or obese in India.
"Once a person starts earning money, he becomes more
sedentary here," says bariatric surgeon Sanjay Borude.
"While in first-world countries, the more the money,
they become more active and devote time for their health, this is reversed in
India."
These flipped economics have worked well for big pharma
players like Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk who have been cashing in on the market.
India's weight‑loss drug sales have grown tenfold in five
years to $153 million as of 2026, and are projected to soar to over half a
billion by 2030.
But using such drugs can cause side effects including nausea
and gastrointestinal issues.
Eli Lilly's Mounjaro became the country's top‑selling drug
by value last year, surpassing even common antibiotics.
Still, high prices -- often 15,000 to 22,000 rupees
($161–$236) a month -- limit access, says Swati Pradhan, who runs a weight-loss
clinic in Mumbai.
She expects patient numbers to rise once generics push
treatment costs closer to 5,000 rupees ($60) a month.
India supplies more than half of Africa's generic medicines,
and cheaper semaglutide could become a lifeline for countries where obesity is
rising rapidly but treatment remains unaffordable.
"Lower‑cost semaglutide could significantly expand
access to effective treatment particularly in middle-income countries where
price has been a major barrier," Simon Barquera, president of the World
Obesity Federation, told AFP.
"But medication alone will not reverse the global rise
in obesity. Obesity is a complex, chronic disease," he said, noting the
importance of prevention efforts and healthier environments.
Indian firms will be a key driving force, with Dr Reddy's
Laboratories aiming to launch its version of semaglutide in Canada by May 2026.
For patients like 46‑year‑old Sukant Mangal, who lost nearly
30 pounds in eight months, wider access could not come soon enough.
Many he knows simply abandoned treatment mid‑way when they
realised they would have to spend 20,000 rupees ($214) a month for seven to
eight months.
"Had it been cheaper, (it) would've been much easier to
have it."


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