GLP-1 drugs NAION vision loss lawsuit MDL 3163 — Ozempic Wegovy optic nerve injury claims
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GLP-1 NAION Vision Loss Lawsuit MDL 3163: Ozempic, Wegovy & Trulicity Eye Injury Claims 2026

Daylongs · · 12 min read

Sudden Vision Loss After Ozempic: What Patients Need to Know

For millions of Americans, semaglutide (Ozempic, Wegovy) and other GLP-1 receptor agonists have become central tools in managing diabetes and obesity. These medications have demonstrated meaningful clinical benefits. But beginning in 2023, a serious safety signal emerged: reports of non-arteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy (NAION) — sudden, permanent vision loss — in patients using GLP-1 drugs.

In July 2024, a peer-reviewed study in JAMA Ophthalmology, conducted by researchers at Harvard Medical School and the Massachusetts Eye and Ear Institute (MEEI), found that semaglutide users had approximately 4 to 7 times the rate of NAION compared to matched controls. The study set off a wave of lawsuits against Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly.

Those lawsuits were consolidated into MDL 3163 in the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, before U.S. District Judge Karen S. Marston. As of May 1, 2026, the JPML reports 86 pending actions — a number that is growing as plaintiff firms continue screening and filing cases.

This guide explains what NAION is, who may qualify to file a claim, what evidence matters, and what to expect from the MDL process. It is not legal advice.


MDL 3163: Court, Judge, and Case Status

MDL 3163 at a Glance:

FieldDetail
Full case nameIn re: GLP-1 RAs NAION Products Liability Litigation
MDL No.3163
CourtU.S. District Court, Eastern District of Pennsylvania (E.D. Pa.)
Presiding judgeHon. Karen S. Marston
Pending actions86 (JPML report, May 1, 2026)
Related MDLMDL 3094 (GLP-1 gastroparesis — separate court, separate judge)

The JPML created MDL 3163 because federal courts across the country were receiving similar complaints: GLP-1 drug users developing NAION. Consolidation in a single court before one judge allows for efficient case management, coordinated discovery from Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly, and consistent rulings on expert witness standards.

Important: Judge Marston also presides over MDL 3094 (GLP-1 gastroparesis). Having one judge handle both MDLs provides administrative efficiency, but the two cases are procedurally and substantively separate. A NAION claim belongs in MDL 3163; a gastroparesis claim in MDL 3094. An attorney can assess whether you have viable claims in one or both.


The Drugs at Issue

Drug NameGeneric NameManufacturerType
OzempicSemaglutide (injection)Novo NordiskGLP-1 agonist
WegovySemaglutide (injection, higher dose)Novo NordiskGLP-1 agonist
RybelsusSemaglutide (oral)Novo NordiskGLP-1 agonist
TrulicityDulaglutideEli LillyGLP-1 agonist
MounjaroTirzepatideEli LillyDual GIP/GLP-1 agonist
ZepboundTirzepatideEli LillyDual GIP/GLP-1 agonist

Note on tirzepatide (Mounjaro/Zepbound): Tirzepatide acts on both GLP-1 and GIP receptors. It is included in the MDL because of its GLP-1 mechanism, though whether its dual-receptor profile changes the NAION risk profile is likely to be contested by experts.


What Is NAION — and Why It Matters

Non-arteritic anterior ischemic optic neuropathy is the most common acute optic nerve disorder in adults over 50. It results from reduced blood flow to the anterior portion of the optic nerve, which is highly dependent on the small posterior ciliary arteries.

Clinical features of NAION:

  • Sudden, painless vision loss — frequently noticed upon waking
  • Typically affects one eye; the other eye remains at elevated risk
  • Visual field loss pattern: commonly an altitudinal defect (upper or lower half of visual field gone)
  • Optic disc edema visible on fundoscopic examination in the acute phase
  • No effective treatment exists — vision loss is generally permanent
  • Approximately 15%–24% of patients experience fellow-eye involvement within 5 years

Established risk factors:

  • Small “disc at risk” anatomy (low cup-to-disc ratio)
  • Hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, sleep apnea
  • Age over 50
  • Male sex
  • Certain medications (including phosphodiesterase inhibitors like sildenafil)

The legal and scientific question in MDL 3163 is not whether these established risk factors cause NAION — they do. The question is whether GLP-1 drugs cause NAION in addition to baseline risk, and whether that additional risk was adequately communicated to prescribers and patients.


The Harvard/MEEI Study: What It Found and Its Limitations

The 2024 JAMA Ophthalmology study is the primary scientific foundation for MDL 3163. Understanding it — including its limitations — prepares you for what both sides will argue.

Study design:

  • Retrospective cohort study at a single large tertiary care academic medical center
  • Compared NAION incidence in GLP-1 users vs. non-GLP-1 users being treated for type 2 diabetes or obesity
  • Controlled for several established NAION risk factors

Key finding: Semaglutide users had approximately 4 to 7 times the NAION incidence compared to controls, depending on the analysis cohort (diabetes vs. obesity).

Plaintiff attorneys will emphasize:

  • 4–7x relative risk is a substantial signal by epidemiological standards
  • The study controlled for baseline risk factors
  • The temporal relationship (drug use preceding NAION onset) supports a plausible causal pathway

Defense attorneys will argue:

  • A single-center retrospective study cannot establish causation
  • The study population may not be representative of all GLP-1 users
  • Residual confounding (uncontrolled risk factors) may explain the association
  • The absolute number of NAION cases in the study was small

These arguments will play out in Daubert hearings before Judge Marston. The court’s ruling on the admissibility and scope of plaintiffs’ causation experts will be one of the most critical early milestones in MDL 3163.


Failure to Warn (Most likely path to liability):

Under the learned intermediary doctrine applicable in most states, drug manufacturers fulfill their duty to warn by adequately informing prescribing physicians of known or reasonably knowable risks. If Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly knew — or should have known — of a materially elevated NAION risk and did not include an adequate warning in the prescribing information (package insert/label), this constitutes a failure to warn.

The current FDA-approved labels for Ozempic, Wegovy, and Trulicity do not include NAION as a recognized adverse reaction. Plaintiffs argue this omission was negligent or reckless given available safety signal data.

Negligent Post-Marketing Surveillance:

Drug manufacturers have ongoing duties to monitor their products’ safety after FDA approval. Plaintiffs may argue that AT&T signals of NAION risk in post-marketing pharmacovigilance data (FAERS database, scientific literature) were not appropriately escalated or communicated.

Design Defect:

A harder argument to win, but some plaintiffs may allege that the GLP-1 receptor agonist mechanism inherently creates an unacceptable NAION risk for certain patient populations — in which case no label change can cure the defect.


Who Qualifies: Eligibility Checklist

Work through this checklist before contacting an attorney:

Required elements:

  • Prescribed and used an Ozempic, Wegovy, Rybelsus, Trulicity, Mounjaro, or Zepbound
  • Experienced sudden vision loss in one eye during or after use
  • Received a confirmed NAION diagnosis from an ophthalmologist

Factors that strengthen your claim:

  • Short interval between GLP-1 drug initiation (or dose escalation) and NAION onset
  • Absence of or well-controlled pre-existing NAION risk factors
  • Severe vision loss (large altitudinal defect, significant VA reduction)
  • Fellow-eye involvement

Factors that complicate but do not necessarily defeat a claim:

  • Pre-existing diabetes or hypertension (GLP-1 drugs are commonly prescribed for these)
  • Use of other medications with NAION risk
  • History of PDE5 inhibitor use

The key legal standard is not “the drug was the only possible cause” but “the drug was a substantial contributing factor.” This is a fact-intensive analysis — consult an attorney.


Building Your Evidence File

Prescription and dispensing records:

  • Obtain complete prescription history from your prescribing doctor(s) and pharmacy records
  • Document: drug name, dose, start date, any escalation dates, stop date (if applicable)

Ophthalmology records — the most critical:

  • Diagnostic report confirming NAION (date of diagnosis is key for SOL purposes)
  • Optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging showing retinal nerve fiber layer changes
  • Humphrey or Goldmann visual field test results
  • Fundus photographs taken at time of acute presentation
  • Fluorescein angiography results (if performed)
  • Follow-up records documenting permanent vision loss

Medical history records:

  • Primary care records confirming presence or absence of diabetes, hypertension, sleep apnea, hyperlipidemia
  • Any ophthalmology records from prior eye exams showing pre-existing cup-to-disc ratio

Economic impact documentation:

  • Records documenting how vision loss affected employment, driving ability, or daily activities
  • Lost income documentation if applicable

Statute of Limitations by State

Under most states’ discovery rules, the limitations period begins when you knew or should have known of the injury — typically the date of your NAION diagnosis.

State-by-state reference (consult an attorney for your specific situation):

StatePersonal Injury SOLDiscovery Rule
California2 yearsYes
Texas2 yearsLimited
New York3 yearsYes
Florida2 yearsYes
Illinois2 yearsYes
Pennsylvania2 yearsYes
Georgia2 yearsYes
New Jersey2 yearsYes
Ohio2 yearsYes
Washington3 yearsYes

In practice: if you were diagnosed with NAION in 2023 and live in a 2-year SOL state, the clock may be running out. Act without delay.

MDL filing does not automatically preserve SOL — your attorney must file a complaint (Short Form Complaint) to toll the limitations period.


A Practical Patient Scenario

The patient: A 62-year-old type 2 diabetic man in Virginia who started Ozempic in early 2023 for diabetes management. His A1c was well-controlled; his blood pressure was managed with medication.

What happened: In late 2023, he woke to find the upper half of his left visual field missing. An ophthalmology appointment confirmed NAION. His cup-to-disc ratio on the affected eye was borderline but not dramatically small.

His legal considerations:

  • Diabetes is a known NAION risk factor — this will be the centerpiece of Novo Nordisk’s defense
  • But his treating ophthalmologist noted the presentation was atypical for uncomplicated diabetic NAION
  • The short interval between Ozempic initiation and symptom onset (approximately 10 months) supports a temporal link
  • Virginia has a 2-year SOL for personal injury; diagnosed late 2023 means the window is closing
  • He should consult a mass tort attorney immediately and obtain all pharmacy and ophthalmology records

This scenario illustrates why pre-existing risk factors complicate but rarely eliminate GLP-1 NAION claims. The litigation will turn on expert testimony about whether, given the specific patient’s baseline, the drug exposure was a contributing cause.


How MDL 3163 Will Proceed

MDL litigation follows a predictable structure. Here is what to expect:

  1. Initial case management orders (CMOs): Judge Marston will establish procedural deadlines, PSC composition, discovery protocols, and short-form complaint procedures.

  2. Plaintiffs’ Steering Committee (PSC) formation: Leading plaintiff firms will be appointed to coordinate discovery from Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly.

  3. Fact discovery: Attorneys will subpoena internal communications, clinical trial data, FAERS reports, and any internal safety analyses related to NAION.

  4. Expert discovery and Daubert briefing: Both sides will retain causation experts. Plaintiffs will need to survive Daubert motions challenging the reliability of their NAION-GLP-1 causation opinions.

  5. Bellwether trials: A small number of representative cases (strong and weak) will be tried to juries. Verdicts help set settlement values.

  6. Global settlement or continued litigation: Based on bellwether outcomes, parties negotiate a settlement fund, or cases proceed to individual trial.

MDL 3163 is early-stage. The full process may take 3–6 years. Timing is not a reason to delay filing — statute of limitations deadlines are.


Distinguishing MDL 3163 from MDL 3094

This distinction matters practically.

FeatureMDL 3094MDL 3163
Injury typeGastroparesis, ileus, bowel obstructionNAION — vision loss
CourtE.D. La. (Eastern District of Louisiana)E.D. Pa. (Eastern District of Pennsylvania)
Presiding judgeDifferent judgeHon. Karen S. Marston
DefendantsNovo Nordisk, Eli Lilly, othersNovo Nordisk, Eli Lilly
Eligible injuryGI tract damage from GLP-1 useOptic nerve ischemia from GLP-1 use

If you have both conditions, you may be eligible for claims in both MDLs. Your attorney would file separate complaints in each.


What to Do Right Now

  1. Collect all prescription records. Contact your prescribing physician and pharmacy for a complete list of GLP-1 prescriptions, doses, and dates.

  2. Request your ophthalmology records. Obtain the full record from every eye care provider you have seen, including the NAION diagnosis documentation.

  3. Build a timeline. Write down: drug start date, any dose changes, date of first symptom, date of diagnosis.

  4. Document functional impact. Note every way the vision loss has changed your life: inability to drive, work changes, loss of reading ability, emotional impact.

  5. Contact a mass tort attorney now. Statute of limitations clocks are running. Initial consultations are free. Filing a Short Form Complaint in the MDL preserves your rights.

  6. Do not stop monitoring your other eye. NAION patients have meaningfully elevated risk of fellow-eye involvement. Annual ophthalmology follow-up is critical.



This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a qualified attorney for advice specific to your situation. Laws vary by state. Information current as of May 2026; the MDL is active and evolving.

What is MDL 3163?

MDL 3163 is formally titled 'In re: Glucagon-like Peptide-1 Receptor Agonists (GLP-1 RAs) Non-Arteritic Anterior Ischemic Optic Neuropathy Products Liability Litigation.' It is pending in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (E.D. Pa.) before Judge Karen S. Marston. As of the JPML report dated May 1, 2026, there are 86 pending actions. This MDL is entirely separate from MDL 3094, which addresses GLP-1-related gastroparesis injuries.

What is NAION?

Non-Arteritic Anterior Ischemic Optic Neuropathy (NAION) is a condition in which blood supply to the optic nerve is suddenly interrupted, causing sudden, painless, and typically permanent vision loss in one eye. There is no effective treatment to restore the lost vision. Established risk factors include diabetes, hypertension, sleep apnea, and a 'disc at risk' optic nerve anatomy.

Which drugs are named in the lawsuit?

Novo Nordisk products: Ozempic (semaglutide injection), Wegovy (semaglutide injection, higher dose), and Rybelsus (semaglutide oral). Eli Lilly products: Trulicity (dulaglutide), Mounjaro (tirzepatide), and Zepbound (tirzepatide). Tirzepatide is a dual GIP/GLP-1 agonist, but is included in the litigation.

What is the science linking GLP-1 drugs to NAION?

A July 2024 study published in JAMA Ophthalmology by researchers at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts Eye and Ear (MEEI) found approximately 4- to 7-fold higher NAION risk in semaglutide users compared to matched controls. This was a retrospective cohort study. The mechanistic explanation is not yet established. The defendants are expected to contest causation vigorously.

How is MDL 3163 different from the GLP-1 gastroparesis MDL 3094?

They are entirely separate. MDL 3094 involves GLP-1 drug-related gastrointestinal injuries (gastroparesis, bowel obstruction) and is pending in a different district. MDL 3163 involves only NAION-related vision loss claims. If you experienced both types of injury, you may need to pursue claims in both MDLs — consult an attorney.

Do I qualify to file a claim?

You may qualify if: (1) you used a GLP-1 RA drug named in the litigation; (2) you experienced sudden vision loss in one eye during or shortly after use; and (3) an ophthalmologist diagnosed you with NAION. Pre-existing risk factors like diabetes or hypertension do not automatically disqualify you — the legal question is whether the drug was a contributing cause.

What is the statute of limitations for a GLP-1 NAION claim?

Personal injury statutes of limitations vary by state, typically 2 to 3 years. Under the discovery rule, the clock often starts when you knew or should have known of the injury — frequently the date of your NAION diagnosis. Contact an attorney immediately to assess your deadline.

What evidence do I need?

Key evidence: (1) GLP-1 prescription and pharmacy fill records showing drug, dose, and duration; (2) ophthalmology records documenting NAION diagnosis, including OCT imaging and visual field testing; (3) temporal connection between drug use and symptom onset; (4) records of other NAION risk factors (or their absence).

How do mass tort contingency fees work?

Mass tort attorneys work on contingency — they receive a percentage (typically 33%–40%) of any recovery, only if you win. There are no upfront costs. Initial consultations are free.

What happens at Daubert hearings in MDL proceedings?

In federal MDL proceedings, the presiding judge holds Daubert hearings to assess whether plaintiffs' and defendants' expert witnesses have used reliable scientific methodology. The court acts as a gatekeeper. In GLP-1 NAION litigation, the central Daubert question will be whether plaintiffs' causation experts can reliably link GLP-1 drug use to NAION above and beyond baseline risk.

How many cases are in MDL 3163 right now?

86 pending and historical actions, per the JPML report as of May 1, 2026. This number is expected to grow as attorneys continue evaluating and filing claims.

My doctor says GLP-1 drugs didn't cause my NAION. Should I still consult an attorney?

Yes. A treating physician's opinion is one data point, but mass tort litigation involves independent causation expert analysis. Doctors are generally not trained in litigation causation standards. Getting a free legal consultation costs nothing and preserves your options.

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