Once-weekly cagrilintide for weight management in people with overweight and obesity: a multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled and active-controlled, dose-finding phase 2 trial.
Lau. David C W DCW; Erichsen. Lars L; Francisco. Ann Marie AM; Satylganova. Altynai A; le Roux. Carel W CW; McGowan. Barbara B; Pedersen. Sue D SD; Pietiläinen. Kirsi H KH; Rubino. Domenica D; Batterham. Rachel L RL
Key Findings
- Cagrilintide produced a clear dose‑response: 0.3 mg gave ~6% weight loss, while 4.5 mg achieved ~10.8% loss.
- Weight loss with the highest dose (4.5 mg) was modestly greater than daily liraglutide 3.0 mg (10.8% vs 9.0%).
- Gastrointestinal side effects (especially nausea) were more frequent than placebo (41‑63% vs 32%) but were mostly mild and manageable.
Practical Outcomes
- For self‑experimenters, a once‑weekly subcutaneous dose of 4 mg–4.5 mg cagrilintide appears to be an effective protocol for significant weight reduction, with a safety profile similar to other GLP‑1/ amylin agents. Expect common GI upset early in treatment; a gradual dose escalation over 6 weeks can help mitigate this. The drug may be a viable alternative to daily liraglutide for those preferring fewer injections.
Summary
In a 26‑week trial, weekly injections of the amylin‑like peptide cagrilintide caused dose‑dependent weight loss of about 6% to almost 11% in adults with overweight or obesity, outperforming placebo and slightly beating daily liraglutide. The drug was generally well tolerated, with the most common side effects being nausea, constipation or diarrhea and mild injection‑site reactions.
Abstract
Natural amylin is a pancreatic hormone that induces satiety. Cagrilintide is a long-acting amylin analogue under investigation for weight management. We assessed the dose-response relationship of cagrilintide regarding the effects on bodyweight, safety, and tolerability. We conducted a multicentre, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled and active-controlled, dose-finding phase 2 trial at 57 sites including hospitals, specialist clinics, and primary care centres in ten countries (Canada, Denmark, Finland, Ireland, Japan, Poland, Serbia, South Africa, the UK, and the USA). Eligible participants were adults aged at least 18 years without diabetes, with a body-mass index of at least 30 kg/m<sup>2</sup> or at least 27 kg/m<sup>2</sup> with hypertension or dyslipidaemia. Participants were randomly assigned (6:1) to subcutaneous self-injections of once-weekly cagrilintide (0·3, 0·6, 1·2, 2·4, or 4·5 mg), once-daily liraglutide 3·0 mg, or volume-matched placebo (for six placebo groups). The trial had a 26-week treatment period, including a dose-escalation period of up to 6 weeks, and a 6-week follow-up period without treatment. Participants and investigators were masked to the assigned study treatment with respect to active versus pooled placebo treatment, but not to different active treatments. The primary endpoint was the percentage change in bodyweight from baseline to week 26, assessed in all randomly assigned participants according to the trial product estimand (assuming all participants were adherent to treatment) and to the treatment policy estimand (regardless of adherence to treatment). Safety was assessed in all participants who received at least one dose of randomised treatment. This trial is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, NCT03856047, and is closed to new participants. Between March 1 and Aug 19, 2019, we randomly assigned 706 participants to cagrilintide 0·3-4·5 mg (100-102 per dose group), 99 to liraglutide 3·0 mg, and 101 to placebo. Permanent treatment discontinuation (n=73 [10%]) occurred similarly across treatment groups, mostly due to adverse events (n=30 [4%]). In total, 29 participants (4%) withdrew from the trial. According to the trial product estimand, mean percentage weight reductions from baseline were greater with all doses of cagrilintide (0·3-4·5 mg, 6·0%-10·8% [6·4-11·5 kg]) versus placebo (3·0% [3·3 kg]; estimated treatment difference range 3·0%-7·8%; p<0·001). Weight reductions were also greater with cagrilintide 4·5 mg versus liraglutide 3·0 mg (10·8% [11·5 kg] vs 9·0% [9·6 kg]; estimated treatment difference 1·8%, p=0·03). Similar weight loss reductions were observed with the treatment policy estimand. The most frequent adverse events were gastrointestinal disorders (eg, nausea, constipation, and diarrhoea) and administration-site reactions. More participants receiving cagrilintide 0·3-4·5 mg had gastrointestinal adverse events compared with placebo (41%-63% vs 32%), primarily nausea (20%-47% vs 18%). Treatment with cagrilintide in people with overweight and obesity led to significant reductions in bodyweight and was well tolerated. The findings support the development of molecules with novel mechanisms of action for weight management. Novo Nordisk A/S.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-11-16T00:00:00.000Z
10.1016/s0140-6736(21)01751-7