Retatrutide targets three hunger hormones at once where every approved drug hits only one or two. Phase 2 produced 24% body weight loss, the highest number ever recorded in a weight loss trial. Phase 3 is underway now.
Phase 2 showed 24% body weight loss, the highest ever recorded in a weight loss trial. More powerful than anything currently approved. Phase 3 trials are now underway.
A weekly injection targeting three hormones. More powerful than anything currently approved. Think of it as the next step beyond Zepbound and Wegovy, targeting one more hormone, and producing meaningfully stronger results.
Every approved GLP-1 drug today, Wegovy, Zepbound, Ozempic, works by targeting one or two hormone receptors in your gut and brain to reduce appetite. Retatrutide targets three: GLP-1, GIP, and glucagon.
That third receptor (glucagon) is what makes it different. While GLP-1 and GIP reduce how much you want to eat, glucagon receptor activation directly increases how many calories your body burns, even at rest. The result is an attack on obesity from both sides at once: less calories in, more calories out.
Zepbound (tirzepatide) hits GLP-1 and GIP and already outperforms Wegovy. Retatrutide adds that third target, which may explain why Phase 2 results surpassed everything before it.
Three receptors targeted. Attacks hunger and metabolism simultaneously. Each receptor does something different. Together, they produce results no single-target drug has matched.
A small subcutaneous injection once a week, similar to Zepbound or Wegovy. The dose is gradually increased over several months to reduce side effects.
GLP-1 and GIP receptor activation reduces hunger hormones and slows gastric emptying. Most trial participants reported dramatically less interest in food within the first few weeks.
The glucagon component increases your resting metabolic rate. Your body burns more energy throughout the day, accelerating fat loss even when you're not active.
Phase 2 (TRIUMPH-1): 338 adults, 48 weeks, published June 2023 in NEJM. Retatrutide's Phase 2 results were published in June 2023 in the New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM), one of the most prestigious medical journals in the world. The TRIUMPH-1 trial enrolled 338 adults with obesity, ran 48 weeks, and included a placebo group for comparison.
To put this in context: Wegovy (semaglutide), currently the best-selling weight loss drug in the world, averages around 15% weight loss. Zepbound (tirzepatide), the most effective approved drug, averages around 20-21%. Retatrutide's Phase 2 result of 24.2% is the highest number ever recorded in a weight loss drug trial. If Phase 3 results match Phase 2, retatrutide could become the new gold standard in obesity treatment.
Phase 3 is underway now. FDA decision expected 2027. Every drug has to pass through three phases of testing before the FDA will approve it. Here's exactly where retatrutide sits today.
Phase 3 trials are still enrolling. You'd get the drug at no cost and have close medical supervision throughout.
Search Open Trials โNot available yet. But here's who it's most likely to help when it is. Retatrutide isn't approved yet, so you can't get a prescription today. But based on Phase 2 data and Eli Lilly's expected indication, here's who it looks best suited for, and who should think carefully.
โ๏ธ Always consult your doctor before starting or changing any weight loss treatment.
Retatrutide vs approved drugs and other pipeline meds. Stacking retatrutide against what's currently available and what's coming.
| Drug | Weight Loss | Mechanism | Form | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ๐Retatrutide You're here | 24% (Ph2) | Triple Agonist | Weekly injection | Phase 3 |
| ๐Zepbound | 21% | Dual Agonist (GLP-1, GIP) | Weekly injection | โ Approved |
| ๐CagriSema | 25% (Ph3) | GLP-1 + Amylin | Weekly injection | Phase 3 |
| ๐Wegovy | 15% | GLP-1 Agonist | Weekly injection | โ Approved |
| ๐Foundayo | 12.4% | GLP-1 Agonist | Daily pill | โ Approved |
Phase 2 and Phase 3 numbers are from clinical trials, not direct drug-to-drug comparisons. Interpret any cross-trial numbers carefully.