CagriSema drives weight loss in rats by reducing energy intake and preserving energy expenditure.
This study investigated the mechanisms underlying weight loss produced by CagriSema — a combination of cagrilintide (an amylin analogue) and semaglutide (a GLP-1 analogue) — in a rat model. Researchers quantified the contributions of reduced energy intake versus preserved energy expenditure to overall weight loss. Rats treated with CagriSema achieved approximately 12% body weight loss alongside a 39% reduction in food intake. To isolate the role of energy intake, the authors used two comparison conditions: pair-feeding (matching food intake to CagriSema-treated animals) and weight matching (determining how much food restriction alone would be needed to achieve equivalent weight loss, which required a 51% reduction in intake). The gap between these conditions suggested that roughly one-third of CagriSema's weight loss effect was attributable to blunting of metabolic adaptation — the phenomenon where the body typically reduces energy expenditure in response to caloric restriction. Limitations include that findings are from an animal model and may not directly translate to humans, and the study does not address long-term outcomes. The authors conclude that CagriSema's dual action on both energy intake and expenditure may contribute to its potential effectiveness as an obesity treatment.