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Cagrilintide

AM-833, Long-acting amylin analogue

Quick Stats
Studies 57
Trials 38
Score 4
2023 pubmed

Cagrilintide: A Long-Acting Amylin Analog for the Treatment of Obesity.

D'Ascanio. Antonella M AM; Mullally. Jamie A JA; Frishman. William H WH

Key Findings

  • Cagrilintide acts like the natural hormone amylin to trigger satiety signals in both homeostatic and reward centers of the brain.
  • Combining cagrilintide with semaglutide (a GLP‑1 agonist) produces an additive effect on appetite suppression and weight loss.
  • Early clinical trials of cagrilintide alone and in combination with semaglutide showed promising, sustained weight‑loss outcomes.

Practical Outcomes

  • If and when cagrilintide becomes available, biohackers could consider it as part of a multi‑drug protocol to boost weight‑loss results, especially alongside a GLP‑1 agonist like semaglutide. The combination appears more effective than either drug alone, so dosing strategies that balance both agents may be worth exploring once safety and dosing guidelines are established.

Summary

Cagrilintide is a new, long‑acting drug that mimics the hormone amylin, which helps you feel full. When used alone or together with the GLP‑1 drug semaglutide, it cuts appetite more than either drug by itself, leading to notable weight loss in early trials. This suggests that combining two different appetite‑control pathways could be a powerful strategy for people looking to lose weight and improve metabolic health.

Abstract

Despite the worldwide epidemic of obesity, there remain few approved pharmacological treatment options to bridge the gap between lifestyle therapy and bariatric surgery. Cagrilintide is an amylin-analog, now being developed in combination with the GLP-1 agonist semaglutide to achieve sustained weight loss in persons with overweight and obesity. Amylin, released with insulin from beta cells in the pancreas, induces its satiating effect via both the homoeostatic and hedonic regions of the brain. Semaglutide, a GLP-1 receptor agonist, reduces appetite via GLP-1 receptors in the hypothalamus and increases the production of insulin, and reduces glucagon secretion, delaying gastric emptying. These separate, but related mechanisms of action of an amylin-analog and a GLP-1 receptor agonist appear to have an additive effect on appetite reduction. Given the heterogeneity and complex pathogenesis of obesity, combination therapy with multiple pathophysiological targets is a logical approach to increasing weight loss response with pharmacotherapy. Cagrilintide alone, as well as cagrilintide in combination with semaglutide have shown promising weight loss in clinical trials that supports the further development of this therapy for sustained weight management.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2023

Date

2023-10-20T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1097/crd.0000000000000513