Emerging pharmacotherapies for obesity: A systematic review.
Kokkorakis. Michail M; Chakhtoura. Marlene M; Rhayem. Caline C; Al Rifai. Jana J; Ghezzawi. Malak M; Valenzuela-Vallejo. Laura L; Mantzoros. Christos S CS
Key Findings
- Retatrutide is a GLP‑1/GIP/glucagon receptor agonist currently in phase 3 trials for obesity.
- Incretin‑based therapies (including GLP‑1 analogs) have produced mean weight losses of 7.4%–24.2% in phase 2 studies.
- The obesity drug pipeline is expanding rapidly, but long‑term safety, mortality impact, and data in diverse populations are still lacking.
Practical Outcomes
- For biohackers interested in cutting‑edge weight‑loss tools, retatrutide looks promising but is not yet available; keep an eye on upcoming phase 3 results. In the meantime, existing GLP‑1 drugs (e.g., semaglutide) already show strong weight‑loss effects and may be a more actionable option. Monitor emerging data for safety and cost considerations before incorporating any new peptide into personal protocols.
Summary
A new wave of obesity drugs is being tested, including a combo peptide called retatrutide that hits three hormone pathways (GLP‑1, GIP, and glucagon). Early trials of similar hormone‑based drugs have shown people lose about 7‑24% of their weight, and many of these new agents are still in phase 2 or 3 studies. While the review doesn’t give exact results for retatrutide yet, it highlights that these multi‑target peptides are the most promising part of the current obesity drug pipeline.
Abstract
The history of antiobesity pharmacotherapies is marked by disappointments, often entangled with societal pressure promoting weight loss and the prevailing conviction that excess body weight signifies a lack of willpower. However, categories of emerging pharmacotherapies generate hope to reduce obesity rates. This systematic review of phase 2 and phase 3 trials in adults with overweight/obesity investigates the effect of novel weight loss pharmacotherapies, compared to placebo/control or US Food and Drug Administration-approved weight loss medication, through searching Medline, Embase, and ClinicalTrials.gov (2012-2024). We identified 53 phase 3 and phase 2 trials, with 36 emerging antiobesity drugs or combinations thereof and 4 withdrawn or terminated trials. Oral semaglutide 50 mg is the only medication that has completed a phase 3 trial. There are 14 ongoing phase 3 trials on glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists (RAs) (ecnoglutide, orforglipron, and TG103), GLP-1 RA/amylin agonist (CagriSema), GLP-1/glucagon RAs (mazdutide and survodutide), GLP-1/glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide and glucagon RA (retatrutide), dapagliflozin, and the combination sibutramine/topiramate. Completed phase 2 trials on incretin-based therapies showed a mean percent weight loss of 7.4% to 24.2%. Almost half of the drugs undergoing phase 2 trials are incretin analogs. The obesity drug pipeline is expanding rapidly, with the most promising results reported with incretin analogs. Data on mortality and obesity-related complications, such as cardio-renal-metabolic events, are needed. Moreover, long-term follow-up data on the safety and efficacy of weight maintenance with novel obesity pharmacotherapies, along with studies focused on underrepresented populations, cost-effectiveness assessments, and drug availability, are needed to bridge the care gap for patients with obesity. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Obesity is the epidemic of the 21st century. Except for the newer injectable medications, drugs with suboptimal efficacy have been available in the clinician's armamentarium for weight management. However, emerging alternatives of novel agents and combinations populate the current obesity therapeutic pipeline. This systematic review identifies the state and mechanism of action of emerging pharmacotherapies undergoing or having completed phase 2 and phase 3 clinical trials. The information provided herein furthers the understanding of obesity management, implying direct clinical implications and stimulating research initiatives.
Study Information
pubmed
2024
2024-11-22T00:00:00.000Z
10.1124/pharmrev.123.001045
39