ResearchJun 26, 20260 views

Papillary thyroid carcinoma discovered in a patient on semaglutide therapy for metabolic syndrome: a case presentation and review of current evidence.

Semaglutide gets another round of scrutiny after a new case report in Hormones (Athens) detailed a papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) discovered in a patient who’d been on the research peptide for metabolic syndrome. Here’s what actually happened — and why researchers shouldn’t overreact.

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Hormones (Athens)

by Haddadin J, Haddad A, Nahar L et al.

Papillary thyroid carcinoma discovered in a patient on semaglutide therapy for metabolic syndrome: a case presentation and review of current evidence. Haddadin J(1), Haddad A(1)(2), Nahar L(1)(3), Hamarneh O(1)(4), Haddad F(5). Author information: (1)Abdali Center for Thyroid, Endocrinology and Diabetes Amman, Abdali Hospital, Amman, Jordan. (2)Current appointment Hull Royal Infirmary-Hull, Hull, United Kingdom. (3)Pathology and Lab Department, Abdali Hospital, Amman, Jordan. (4)ENT Department, Abdali Hospital, Amman, Jordan. (5)Abdali Center for Thyroid, Endocrinology and Diabetes Amman, Abdali Hospital, Amman, Jordan. haddf@hotmail.com. BACKGROUND: Semaglutide, a glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist (GLP-1 RA), is widely used for the management of type 2 diabetes, metabolic syndrome, and obesity. Concerns regarding its potential association with thyroid cancer, particularly medullary thyroid carcinoma, have emerged, although current human evidence remains inconclusive. Reports of papillary thyroid carcinoma (PTC) while using semaglutide therapy are exceedingly rare. CASE PRESENTATION: We describe a 40-year-old man with metabolic syndrome and obesity who had been treated with semaglutide for several years before discontinuation. A routine chest computed tomography (CT) performed for an unrelated diaphragmatic hernia identified a suspicious thyroid lesion, later confirmed by ultrasound as a 1 × 1 cm irregular hypoechoic nodule in the left lobe with several small ipsilateral lymph nodes demonstrating suspicious features. Fine-needle aspiration cytology revealed classic PTC (Bethesda VI). The patient underwent total thyroidectomy with left selective neck dissection and central compartment dissection. Histopathology confirmed a unifocal classic variant PTC, 16 mm in size, with negative margins, no lymph node involvement, and no extrathyroidal extension. After an uncomplicated postoperative course, he was prescribed levothyroxine for TSH suppression and discharged. CONCLUSION: This case of PTC discovered concomitantly while the patient was on semaglutide therapy highlights an important clinical scenario but does not provide evidence of causation. The totality of available human data continues to support the safety of semaglutide with respect to thyroid cancer risk. Further long-term surveillance and high-quality epidemiological studies remain warranted. © 2026. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Hellenic Endocrine Society. Conflict of interest statement: Declarations. Ethics approval and consent to participate: Ethical approval was not required for this case report, as per institutional guidelines. Written informed consent for clinical data use was obtained from the patient. Consent for publication: Written informed consent was obtained from the patient for publication of this case report and any accompanying clinical details. Competing interests: The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

A 40-year-old man, treated with semaglutide for several years, went in for a routine chest scan. The scan picked up a suspicious thyroid nodule totally unrelated to his original complaint. Ultrasound confirmed the finding, and a biopsy revealed classic papillary thyroid carcinoma. He underwent surgery. The tumor was removed with clean margins, no lymph node spread, and an easy recovery.

Here’s the key point: This is a case report, not proof of cause and effect. The current body of research still backs the safety profile of semaglutide regarding thyroid cancer risk. Human data just aren’t showing a credible link — especially for papillary (not medullary) thyroid carcinoma.

Worth noting for peptide researchers:

Medullary thyroid carcinoma is the type that gets most of the concern in animal studies, not papillary.

Human evidence connecting semaglutide to thyroid cancers is still absent — despite millions of users.

Finding a thyroid nodule on imaging is common, especially with modern scans. Most are benign.

Researchers need to stay sharp, but not paranoid. This case just reinforces the need for long-term data, not panic. If you’re working with semaglutide, keep an eye on new publications, but the science hasn’t changed.

For those sourcing compounds, check out our vendor directory for options.

Bottom line: One case doesn’t change the consensus. Semaglutide remains a solid research peptide, and the thyroid cancer link is still just a theory, not a fact.

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