The next big obesity medication coming down the pipeline will likely come in pill form. Eli Lilly has just released the latest positive Phase III trial results of its experimental oral GLP-1 drug, orforglipron.
On Tuesday morning, Eli Lilly reported that orforglipron met the benchmarks of the company’s Phase III ATTAIN-2 study. People taking orforglipron experienced substantial improvements in weight loss and blood sugar control compared to those taking a placebo, the study showed. Armed with data from two successful Phase III trials, the company plans to apply for approval from the Food and Drug Administration, with a decision on the drug expected next year.
The newest kid on the block
The ATTAIN-2 trial was conducted across 10 countries and involved more than 1,600 people who were obese or overweight with type 2 diabetes. Volunteers were randomized to either receive a placebo or one of three varying doses of orforglipron, taken once a day (as is common with GLP-1 therapy, people gradually reached their maximum dose over time). The participants were tracked for 72 weeks.
No matter the dose, people on orforglipron lost more weight and saw a greater reduction in blood sugar than people on placebo, the study found.
Those taking more of the drug did show more improvement, though. People on the highest dose of orforglipron lost on average around 10% of their baseline body weight, for instance, compared to the 2.5% average weight loss seen in those taking a placebo. The drug performed better on all secondary endpoints as well, including a greater percentage of people losing at least 15% of their weight (roughly a third of those on the highest dose achieved this).
Orforglipron also appeared to be as safe and tolerable as other existing GLP-1 drugs. Common adverse events included diarrhea, vomiting, and constipation (more common for those on the highest dose). About 10% of participants on the highest dose discontinued treatment due to their adverse events, compared to 5% of those on placebo.
These results follow similar findings from the company’s ATTAIN-1 trial released earlier this month, which tested the drug on people who were overweight or obese without type 2 diabetes (in general, people without diabetes tend to lose more weight from GLP-1 therapy than those with diabetes). The company will now formally push forward with seeking approval from the FDA and other regulatory agencies.
“With these positive data in hand, we are moving with urgency toward global regulatory submissions to potentially meet the needs of patients who are waiting,” said Kenneth Custer, executive vice president of Eli Lilly and president of Lilly Cardiometabolic Health, in a statement from the company.
Why orforglipron won’t be for everyone
Currently, there is only one GLP-1 pill on the market: Novo Nordisk’s Rybelsus, an oral form of its blockbuster drug semaglutide (the active ingredient in Ozempic and Wegovy) that’s approved to treat type 2 diabetes. Novo Nordisk has sought FDA approval for a higher-dose version of oral semaglutide to treat obesity, which may arrive later this year. Eli Lilly’s orforglipron, however, would be the first next-generation GLP-1 pill for weight loss if approved.
Monumental as this approval would be, orforglipron isn’t likely to completely overtake its competitors for several reasons.
For starters, the drug may not outperform the latest GLP-1 therapies out there. In the drug’s best showing so far, the ATTAIN-1 trial, people taking orforglipron lost on average 12.4% of their baseline weight, a notch below the roughly 14% weight loss seen in similar trials of Novo Nordisk’s injectable Wegovy and also below the typical results seen with Eli Lilly’s tirzepatide, a dual GLP-1/GIP medication. The likely arrival of Novo Nordisk’s high-dose semaglutide pill in late 2025 may also take up some of the consumer base for orforglipron.
That said, many potential users may prefer the comfort of a daily pill over a weekly subcutaneous injection, even if it’s slightly worse in effectiveness.
An oral GLP-1 pill is also likely easier to mass produce than injectable versions, which could prevent or limit the risk of widespread shortages that regularly affected semaglutide and tirzepatide in the first years of approval. And there may be some people previously unresponsive to existing therapies who would benefit from trying orforglipron instead.
Barring any unforeseen complications, orforglipron is on track to be the next big new GLP-1 approval. But it surely won’t be the last, and the competition over the best obesity drug is only likely to heat up in the years to come.
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