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Retatrutide

LY3437943, LY-3437943

Quick Stats
Studies 83
Trials 32
Score 4
2023 pubmed 7 citations

Advances in obesity pharmacotherapy; learning from metabolic surgery and beyond.

Tsilingiris. Dimitrios D; Kokkinos. Alexander A

Key Findings

  • Metabolic surgery’s lasting weight loss is driven by altered gut hormone secretion.
  • GLP‑1 receptor agonists already improve weight and metabolism, and adding GIP and glucagon (dual/triple agonists) boosts these effects.
  • Triple‑agonist drugs such as retatrutide can achieve weight‑loss results comparable to common bariatric procedures.

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, emerging triple‑agonist peptides like retatrutide represent a potentially powerful, non‑surgical option for major weight loss and metabolic health improvements. While promising, they are still under clinical evaluation, so users should watch for trial results, dosing guidelines, and safety data before incorporating them into personal protocols.

Summary

The paper explains that the biggest weight‑loss success comes from bariatric surgery, which works partly by changing gut hormones. New drugs that combine GLP‑1, GIP, and glucagon signals (like retatrutide) can cause weight loss almost as big as surgery, opening the door to a non‑surgical "medical bypass" for obesity and related health problems.

Abstract

Currently, metabolic surgery (MS) constitutes the most effective means for durable weight loss of clinically meaningful magnitude, type 2 diabetes remission and resolution of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis, as well as other obesity-related comorbidities. Accumulating evidence on the mechanisms through which MS exerts its actions has highlighted the altered secretion of hormonally active peptides of intestinal origin with biological actions crucial to energy metabolism as key drivers of MS clinical effects. The initial success of glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists regarding weight loss and metabolic amelioration have been followed by the development of unimolecular dual and triple polyagonists, additionally exploiting the effects of glucagon and/or glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) which achieves a magnitude of weight loss approximating that of common MS operations. Through the implementation of such therapies, the feasibility of a "medical bypass", namely the replication of the clinical effects of MS through non-surgical interventions may be foreseeable in the near future. Apart from weight loss, this approach ought to be put to the test also regarding other clinical outcomes, such as liver steatosis and steatohepatitis, cardiovascular disease, and overall prognosis, on which MS has a robustly demonstrated impact. Besides, a medical bypass as an alternative, salvage, or combination strategy to MS may promote precision medicine in obesity therapeutics.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2023

Date

2023-11-22T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1016/j.metabol.2023.155741

Citations

7

References

185