If you want to understand why your doctor keeps adjusting your dose, it helps to know what titration means and why it exists. PeptPro gives you a place to record every symptom, every dose, and every weight check so your next appointment comes with real data instead of vague memories. Open the app and start tracking.
When your doctor prescribes a GLP-1, the first injection does not come at the dose that will keep treatment running for months. You start low. And that is not bureaucracy or unnecessary delay. It is your body asking for time to understand what is happening.
Titration is the term for this gradual dose-adjustment process. The idea is straightforward: find the right amount for each person, respecting the pace the body can handle without triggering severe side effects. There is no single dose that works the same for everyone. What works is a common starting point and a progressive increase until reaching the dose where treatment is effective without being harmful.
Most GLP-1 medications on the market follow this protocol. Ozempic, Wegovy, Mounjaro, Saxenda. All of them have a titration schedule. Some go from 0.25 mg to 0.5 mg, then to 1 mg, then to 2 mg. Others start at 2.5 mg and climb to 15 mg. The logic is identical: start slowly, observe, adjust.
The STEP and SUSTAIN trials, which followed thousands of patients over months, showed that this titration format significantly reduced dropout rates caused by side effects. When the dose increases gradually, the body adapts. When phases are skipped, the risk of persistent nausea, vomiting, and dehydration rises disproportionately. Titration is not a delay tactic. It is a safety mechanism.