Vitamin and Nutrient Deficiencies on Mounjaro: What Your Doctor Should Monitor

Patient Guides

25 May 2026

A woman preparing a colourful nutrient-rich meal with leafy greens, salmon, eggs, and citrus fruits in a sunlit kitchen

Vitamin deficiency on Mounjaro is one of the most under-discussed risks of GLP-1 treatment. When tirzepatide suppresses your appetite and you eat significantly less food, you also take in fewer essential vitamins and minerals. Over weeks and months, these shortfalls can quietly build into clinically meaningful deficiencies that affect your energy, mood, immune function, and long-term health.

At CutKilo, every patient receives a structured blood-monitoring programme throughout treatment. In this guide, we explain which nutrients are most at risk during Mounjaro therapy, how to recognise early warning signs, and what your doctor should be testing at each review.

Quick Answer: Can Mounjaro Cause Vitamin Deficiency?

Mounjaro itself does not directly deplete vitamins. However, the significant reduction in food intake that tirzepatide produces can lead to inadequate consumption of key nutrients. Additionally, tirzepatide slows gastric emptying and may reduce stomach acid production, which can impair the absorption of certain vitamins, particularly B12. A meta-analysis published in Clinical Obesity in February 2026, covering over 480,000 adults on GLP-1 medications, confirmed an elevated risk of nutritional deficiencies in this patient group.

Why Nutrient Gaps Develop During GLP-1 Treatment

There are three overlapping mechanisms that explain why patients on Mounjaro are vulnerable to vitamin and mineral shortfalls.

First, reduced caloric intake is the most obvious factor. When your appetite drops and you eat smaller portions, you naturally consume fewer micronutrients. A patient eating 1,200 calories per day instead of 2,000 is taking in roughly 40% less of every vitamin and mineral their food would normally provide.

Second, altered gastric physiology plays a role. Tirzepatide slows the rate at which your stomach empties, and emerging evidence suggests it may also reduce gastric acid secretion. Stomach acid is essential for releasing vitamin B12 from food proteins and for converting certain forms of iron and calcium into absorbable states.

Third, dietary quality often shifts during treatment. Patients experiencing nausea or early satiety tend to gravitate towards bland, low-nutrient foods such as crackers, toast, and white rice. While these choices settle the stomach, they displace the nutrient-dense foods, including red meat, leafy greens, and oily fish, that would normally cover micronutrient needs. Our guide on protein intake during Mounjaro treatment explains why macronutrient balance matters alongside micronutrient monitoring.

Which Vitamins and Minerals Are Most at Risk?

Not every nutrient is equally vulnerable. Based on the available clinical evidence and our experience managing over a thousand GLP-1 patients at CutKilo, the following nutrients warrant the closest attention.

Vitamin B12: This is the nutrient most frequently flagged in GLP-1 research. B12 requires stomach acid for absorption from food, and tirzepatide may reduce acid output. Deficiency develops slowly, often over 6 to 12 months, but the consequences are serious: fatigue, peripheral neuropathy (tingling or numbness in hands and feet), cognitive fog, and macrocytic anaemia. The MHRA Summary of Product Characteristics for tirzepatide does not list B12 depletion as a direct side effect, but the mechanism is well established from metformin research and is biologically plausible for GLP-1 agonists.

Vitamin D: Many UK adults are already deficient in vitamin D before starting Mounjaro. NICE recommends that all adults in the UK consider supplementing with 10 micrograms (400 IU) daily, particularly between October and March. Reduced food intake on Mounjaro further limits dietary sources such as oily fish, eggs, and fortified cereals. Vitamin D deficiency impairs calcium absorption, weakens bones, and may worsen fatigue.

Iron: Iron deficiency is especially relevant for premenopausal women on Mounjaro, who lose iron monthly through menstruation while simultaneously eating less red meat and fewer iron-rich foods. Symptoms include persistent tiredness, breathlessness on exertion, pallor, and brittle nails. Ferritin levels should be checked at baseline and at each review.

Folate: Folate works closely with B12 in red blood cell production and DNA synthesis. Reduced intake of leafy greens, legumes, and fortified cereals on a calorie-restricted diet can push folate levels downwards. This is particularly important for women of childbearing age, as folate deficiency in early pregnancy is linked to neural tube defects.

Calcium and magnesium: Both minerals are essential for bone health, muscle function, and nerve signalling. Patients who reduce their intake of dairy products, nuts, and green vegetables during GLP-1 therapy may develop subclinical deficiencies. Magnesium deficiency can also contribute to muscle cramps, which some patients attribute to Mounjaro itself rather than to inadequate intake.

Zinc: Zinc supports immune function, wound healing, and taste perception. Reduced food intake and a bias towards processed, low-nutrient meals can deplete zinc stores. Some patients report changes in taste during treatment, which may partly reflect declining zinc status.

What Your Doctor Should Be Testing

Structured blood monitoring is not optional during GLP-1 therapy. At CutKilo, we follow a protocol aligned with current best practice.

At baseline (before starting Mounjaro): full blood count (FBC), comprehensive metabolic panel, serum B12, serum folate, 25-hydroxyvitamin D, ferritin, iron studies, magnesium, and HbA1c. This establishes each patient’s starting point and identifies pre-existing deficiencies that need correcting before treatment begins.

At 3-month intervals during active weight loss: repeat FBC, B12, folate, ferritin, vitamin D, and magnesium. This cadence catches early declines before symptoms develop. Patients losing weight rapidly, defined as more than 1 kg per week sustained over several weeks, may benefit from more frequent checks.

At maintenance (once target weight is reached): 6-monthly monitoring is usually sufficient, provided the patient’s diet has stabilised and any identified deficiencies have been corrected.

Supplementation: What to Take and When

Supplementation should be guided by blood results, not guesswork. However, certain baseline supplements are reasonable for most Mounjaro patients based on population-level evidence.

A high-quality daily multivitamin with methylated B vitamins provides a safety net. Methylated forms (methylcobalamin for B12, methylfolate for folate) are better absorbed than their synthetic counterparts, particularly in patients with MTHFR gene variants.

Vitamin D3 combined with K2, at a dose of 2,000 to 4,000 IU daily, is appropriate for most UK patients. Vitamin K2 directs calcium into bones rather than soft tissues, making it a valuable partner for D3 supplementation.

Iron supplements should only be taken if blood tests confirm deficiency or low-normal ferritin, as excess iron causes oxidative damage. Iron is best absorbed on an empty stomach with vitamin C, but patients experiencing GI side effects from Mounjaro may tolerate it better taken with a small amount of food.

Magnesium glycinate or citrate, at 200 to 400 mg daily, is well tolerated and helps with sleep quality and muscle cramps. Avoid magnesium oxide, which is poorly absorbed and can worsen the diarrhoea some patients experience on Mounjaro.

Warning Signs You Should Not Ignore

Nutrient deficiencies often develop gradually, and early symptoms can overlap with the normal side-effect profile of Mounjaro. Nevertheless, certain signs warrant prompt investigation.

Persistent fatigue that does not improve with rest or better sleep may indicate B12, iron, or vitamin D deficiency. Tingling, numbness, or a “pins and needles” sensation in the hands or feet is a red flag for B12 neuropathy and requires urgent testing. Unusual hair thinning beyond what is expected during rapid weight loss may reflect iron or zinc deficiency. Frequent infections or slow wound healing can signal zinc or vitamin D insufficiency. Muscle cramps, particularly at night, may point to low magnesium or calcium.

If you experience any of these symptoms, contact your prescribing clinic. At CutKilo, patients can request blood work outside the routine schedule if new symptoms develop.

How CutKilo Manages Nutritional Safety

At CutKilo, nutritional monitoring is built into every treatment plan. Our doctor-led service includes baseline blood tests before prescribing, structured 3-monthly reviews during active weight loss, personalised supplementation guidance based on individual results, and direct access to our clinical team if new symptoms arise between scheduled reviews.

This approach reflects a fundamental principle of responsible GLP-1 prescribing: weight loss is only successful if it is also safe. Services that prescribe Mounjaro without any blood monitoring leave patients exposed to preventable nutritional harms.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Mounjaro directly cause vitamin deficiency? Mounjaro does not directly deplete vitamins from your body. However, the reduced food intake and altered gastric function it produces can lead to insufficient intake and absorption of key nutrients over time. Regular blood monitoring catches these changes early.

Which vitamin is most commonly affected by Mounjaro? Vitamin B12 is the most frequently studied nutrient in GLP-1 research. Tirzepatide may reduce the stomach acid needed to absorb B12 from food, and reduced meat and dairy intake compounds the risk. A simple blood test can confirm your B12 status.

Should I take a multivitamin while on Mounjaro? A comprehensive multivitamin is a reasonable baseline supplement for most patients on Mounjaro, particularly during the active weight-loss phase when caloric intake is lowest. Choose a product with methylated B vitamins for optimal absorption. However, a multivitamin should not replace regular blood monitoring or targeted supplementation when specific deficiencies are identified.

How often should I have blood tests while on Mounjaro? Best practice recommends a comprehensive panel at baseline (before starting treatment), then repeat key markers every 3 months during active weight loss. Once your weight stabilises, 6-monthly testing is usually sufficient. Your prescribing doctor should adjust the schedule based on your individual results and symptoms.

Can I just eat better instead of supplementing? Improving dietary quality is always the first-line approach. Prioritising nutrient-dense foods such as oily fish, leafy greens, eggs, lean meats, and legumes can substantially reduce your risk of deficiency. However, when caloric intake is very low during the early dose-escalation phase, even an excellent diet may not fully meet micronutrient needs, which is why supplementation and monitoring together provide the strongest safety net.

The Bottom Line

Mounjaro is a powerful and effective treatment for weight loss, but reduced food intake carries real nutritional consequences that require active management. The single most important clinical takeaway is this: structured blood monitoring at baseline and every three months during active treatment is not a luxury, it is a clinical necessity. Vitamin B12, vitamin D, iron, folate, magnesium, and zinc should all feature on the test panel. Early detection of deficiencies, combined with targeted supplementation, keeps patients safe while they achieve their weight-loss goals.

Start Your CutKilo Journey

CutKilo is a doctor-led supervised Mounjaro weight-loss service based at 86 Harley Street, London W1G 7HP. Call: 0207 637 8227. Start the CutKilo questionnaire to see if you are suitable for treatment.

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