Key takeaways
- • Severity: No clinically significant interaction known.
- • Saxenda (weight management (FDA-approved obesity)) and Rosuvastatin (Crestor) (Statin (cholesterol)).
- • Clinical management: No dose adjustment required.
- • Monitoring: Standard lipid panel and liver enzymes per statin protocol.
Mechanism
No specific PK study with lirastutide × rosuvastatin, but extrapolating from atorvastatin data, any absorption delay would not affect AUC. Statin LDL-lowering depends on cumulative exposure, not peak.
Clinical management
No dose adjustment required.
GLP1Zoom does not prescribe medications or recommend dose changes. Always confirm any adjustment with your prescribing clinician before changing how you take Saxenda or Rosuvastatin (Crestor).
Monitoring
Standard lipid panel and liver enzymes per statin protocol.
When to call your doctor
- muscle pain or weakness
- dark urine
In emergencies — severe abdominal pain, persistent vomiting, fainting, signs of severe hypoglycemia (confusion, seizures), or signs of bleeding — call 911 or go to the nearest emergency department.
Source / FDA label citation
Not specifically listed in current FDA label
Editorial confidence: 8/10. Lower scores reflect inferred mechanism rather than directly-labeled interaction. We re-verify against the active FDA prescribing information at least every 6 months.
Common questions
Can I take Rosuvastatin (Crestor) with Saxenda?
Rosuvastatin (Crestor) and Saxenda have no clinically significant interaction documented. Standard prescribing applies. Always confirm with your prescriber, since individual medical history can change the calculation.
What's the mechanism of any Saxenda + Rosuvastatin (Crestor) interaction?
No specific PK study with lirastutide × rosuvastatin, but extrapolating from atorvastatin data, any absorption delay would not affect AUC. Statin LDL-lowering depends on cumulative exposure, not peak.
What should I monitor when on Saxenda + Rosuvastatin (Crestor)?
Standard lipid panel and liver enzymes per statin protocol.
When should I call my doctor?
Contact your prescriber if you notice any of: muscle pain or weakness; dark urine.
Related
This page summarizes general pharmacology from FDA-approved prescribing information. It is not a substitute for personalized medical advice. GLP1Zoom is an affiliate-only comparator — we do not prescribe or sell medications. Full disclaimer.