Retatrutide
| Clinical data | |
|---|---|
| Other names | LY-3437943 |
| Identifiers | |
| |
| CAS Number | |
| UNII | |
| ChEMBL | |
| Chemical and physical data | |
| |
| |
Retatrutide (LY-3437943) is an experimental drug for obesity developed by the American pharmaceutical company Eli Lilly and Company. It is a triple glucagon hormone receptor agonist (GLP-1, GIP, and GCGR receptors).[1][2][3] It has been shown to achieve a more than 17.5% mean weight reduction in adults without diabetes but with obesity or preobesity (overweight) during a phase 2 trial.[4][5][6] In the trial, the participants who received the highest dose (12 mg) showed a mean weight reduction of 24.2% after 48 weeks.[6] Retatrutide is currently in phase 3 clinical trials, one of many GLP-1 receptor agonists in development.[7] In a 2025 fat-mass substudy of adults with type 2 diabetes, Retatrutide achieved statistically significantly greater total body fat mass reduction at 36 weeks than both placebo and dulaglutide.[8]
Chemistry
[edit]Retatrutide is a peptide with the following amino acid sequence[9]
YA¹QGTFTSDYSIL²LDKK⁴AQA¹AFIEYLLEGGPSSGAPPPS³
where letters with superscripted numbers refer to the following chemical modifications:
- "A¹" refers to 2-aminoisobutyric acid (Aib).
- "L²" refers to leucine modified with an α-methyl substituent (MeL, 2-methylleucine).
- "S³" refers to L-serinamide (L-serine with the carboxylic acid group replaced with a carboxamide).
- "K⁴" refers to L-lysine with the amino group at position 6 modified with a side chain; specifically, (AEEA)-(γ-Glu)-(C20 diacid) (where AEEA is 2-[2-(2-aminoethoxy)ethoxy]acetic acid, commonly used as a spacer group in synthetic peptides).
References
[edit]- ^ Coskun T, Urva S, Roell WC, Qu H, Loghin C, Moyers JS, et al. (September 2022). "LY3437943, a novel triple glucagon, GIP, and GLP-1 receptor agonist for glycemic control and weight loss: From discovery to clinical proof of concept". Cell Metabolism. 34 (9): 1234–1247.e9. doi:10.1016/j.cmet.2022.07.013. PMID 35985340. S2CID 251675508.
- ^ Bhat S, Fernandez CJ, Lakshmi V, Pappachan JM (August 2025). "Efficacy and safety of incretin co-agonists: Transformative advances in cardiometabolic healthcare". World Journal of Cardiology. 17 (8) 107991. doi:10.4330/wjc.v17.i8.107991. PMC 12426997. PMID 40949933.
- ^ Concepción-Zavaleta MJ, Fuentes-Mendoza JM, Gonzáles-Yovera JG, Ruvalcaba-Barbosa GY, Cura-Rodríguez LD, González-Rodríguez JS, et al. (October 2025). "Efficacy and safety of anti-obesity drugs in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease: An updated review". World Journal of Gastroenterology. 31 (37) 111435. doi:10.3748/wjg.v31.i37.111435. PMC 12476660. PMID 41025003.
- ^ "Lilly's phase 2 retatrutide results published in The New England Journal of Medicine show the investigational molecule achieved up to 17.5% mean weight reduction at 24 weeks in adults with obesity and overweight". investor.lilly.com (Press release). Eli Lilly. 26 June 2023. Retrieved 3 July 2023.
- ^ Constantino AK (26 June 2023). "Eli Lilly experimental obesity drug could beat rivals in total weight loss for patients". CNBC.com. Retrieved 3 July 2023.
- ^ a b Jastreboff AM, Kaplan LM, Frías JP, Wu Q, Du Y, Gurbuz S, et al. (August 2023). "Triple-Hormone-Receptor Agonist Retatrutide for Obesity - A Phase 2 Trial". The New England Journal of Medicine. 389 (6): 514–526. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2301972. PMID 37366315. S2CID 259260926. Free access subject to registration.
- ^ "A Study of Retatrutide (LY3437943) in Participants With Obesity and Cardiovascular Disease (TRIUMPH-3) - Lilly Clinical Trials". Lilly Trials. Retrieved 2025-08-24.
- ^ Coskun T, Wu Q, Schloot NC, Haupt A, Milicevic Z, Khouli C, et al. (August 2025). "Effects of retatrutide on body composition in people with type 2 diabetes: a substudy of a phase 2, double-blind, parallel-group, placebo-controlled, randomised trial". The Lancet. Diabetes & Endocrinology. 13 (8): 674–684. doi:10.1016/S2213-8587(25)00092-0. PMID 40609566.
- ^ "Retatrutide". Compound Report Card. European Bioinformatics Institute, European Molecular Biology Laboratory. n.d. Retrieved August 5, 2024.