Efficacy and safety of co-administered once-weekly cagrilintide 2·4 mg with once-weekly semaglutide 2·4 mg in type 2 diabetes: a multicentre, randomised, double-blind, active-controlled, phase 2 trial.
Frias. Juan P JP; Deenadayalan. Srikanth S; Erichsen. Lars L; Knop. Filip K FK; Lingvay. Ildiko I; Macura. Stanislava S; Mathieu. Chantal C; Pedersen. Sue D SD; Davies. Melanie M
Key Findings
- CagriSema reduced HbA1c by 2.2 % (SE 0.15) compared with 1.8 % for semaglutide and 0.9 % for cagrilintide alone.
- Weight loss with CagriSema was 15.6 % of baseline weight, far greater than the 5.1 % loss with semaglutide and 8.1 % with cagrilintide.
- Time‑in‑range on continuous glucose monitoring rose to 88.9 % with the combo, versus 76.2 % for semaglutide and 71.7 % for cagrilintide.
- Adverse events occurred in 68 % (combo), 71 % (semaglutide) and 80 % (cagrilintide) of participants, mainly mild/moderate GI symptoms; no severe hypoglycemia or deaths were reported.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers seeking strong weight‑loss alongside glucose control, a weekly injection of semaglutide 2.4 mg plus cagrilintide 2.4 mg appears far more effective than either drug alone, with tolerable gastrointestinal side effects. The regimen is still early‑phase and requires medical oversight, but it offers a promising protocol for motivated individuals willing to use injectable peptides.
Summary
In a 32‑week trial with 92 adults who have type 2 diabetes, a once‑weekly combo of semaglutide (2.4 mg) and cagrilintide (2.4 mg) lowered blood sugar about as well as semaglutide alone but caused dramatically more weight loss – roughly 15% of body weight versus 5% with semaglutide and 8% with cagrilintide. Side effects were mostly mild stomach issues and no severe low‑blood‑sugar events were seen.
Abstract
Combining the GLP-1 receptor agonist semaglutide with the long-acting amylin analogue cagrilintide has weight-loss benefits; the impact on glycated haemoglobin (HbA<sub>1c</sub>) is unknown. This trial assessed the efficacy and safety of co-administered semaglutide with cagrilintide (CagriSema) in participants with type 2 diabetes. This 32-week, multicentre, double-blind, phase 2 trial was conducted across 17 sites in the USA. Adults with type 2 diabetes and a BMI of 27 kg/m<sup>2</sup> or higher on metformin with or without an SGLT2 inhibitor were randomly assigned (1:1:1) to once-weekly subcutaneous CagriSema, semaglutide, or cagrilintide (all escalated to 2·4 mg). Randomisation was done centrally using an interactive web response system and was stratified according to use of SGLT2 inhibitor treatment (yes vs no). The trial participants, investigators, and trial sponsor staff were masked to treatment assignment throughout the trial. The primary endpoint was change from baseline in HbA<sub>1c</sub>; secondary endpoints were bodyweight, fasting plasma glucose, continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) parameters, and safety. Efficacy analyses were performed in all participants who had undergone randomisation, and safety analyses in all participants who had undergone randomisation and received at least one dose of the trial medication. This trial is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04982575) and is complete. Between Aug 2 and Oct 18, 2021, 92 participants were randomly assigned to CagriSema (n=31), semaglutide (n=31), or cagrilintide (n=30). 59 (64%) participants were male; the mean age of participants was 58 years (SD 9). The mean change in HbA<sub>1c</sub> from baseline to week 32 (CagriSema: -2·2 percentage points [SE 0·15]; semaglutide: -1·8 percentage points [0·16]; cagrilintide: -0·9 percentage points [0·15]) was greater with CagriSema versus cagrilintide (estimated treatment difference -1·3 percentage points [95% CI -1·7 to -0·8]; p<0·0001), but not versus semaglutide (-0·4 percentage points [-0·8 to 0·0]; p=0·075). The mean change in bodyweight from baseline to week 32 (CagriSema: -15·6% [SE 1·26]; semaglutide: -5·1% [1·26]; cagrilintide: -8·1% [1·23]) was greater with CagriSema versus both semaglutide (p<0·0001) and cagrilintide (p<0·0001). The mean change in fasting plasma glucose from baseline to week 32 (CagriSema: -3·3 mmol/L [SE 0·3]; semaglutide: -2·5 mmol/L [0·4]; cagrilintide: -1·7 mmol/L [0·3]) was greater with CagriSema versus cagrilintide (p=0·0010) but not versus semaglutide (p=0·10). Time in range (3·9-10·0 mmol/L) was 45·9%, 32·6%, and 56·9% at baseline and 88·9%, 76·2%, and 71·7% at week 32 with CagriSema, semaglutide, and cagrilintide, respectively. Adverse events were reported by 21 (68%) participants in the CagriSema group, 22 (71%) in the semaglutide group, and 24 (80%) in the cagrilintide group. Mild or moderate gastrointestinal adverse events were most common; no level 2 or 3 hypoglycaemia was reported. No fatal adverse events were reported. In people with type 2 diabetes, treatment with CagriSema resulted in clinically relevant improvements in glycaemic control (including CGM parameters). The mean change in HbA<sub>1c</sub> with CagriSema was greater versus cagrilintide, but not versus semaglutide. Treatment with CagriSema resulted in significantly greater weight loss versus semaglutide and cagrilintide and was well tolerated. These data support further investigation of CagriSema in this population in longer and larger phase 3 studies. Novo Nordisk.
Study Information
pubmed
2023
2023-06-23T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/s0140-6736(23)01163-7