Peptilotbeta

Latest research

The peptide literature, summarized and graded.

Every paper distilled to a plain-language summary with an honest evidence grade — from strong human trials to animal-only signals. 51 papers indexed and counting.

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Moderate · human

Efficacy and Safety of Mazdutide in Managing Overweight and Obesity Among Non-Diabetic Adults: A Meta-Analysis of Randomised Controlled Trials.

This meta-analysis pooled data from five randomised controlled trials to evaluate the efficacy and safety of mazdutide — a dual GLP-1 and glucagon receptor agonist — for weight management in non-diabetic adults with overweight or obesity. Searches were conducted across Cochrane Library, PubMed, Google Scholar, and ClinicalTrials.gov, and analyses were performed using random-effects models in RevMan 5.4. The pooled results reported by the study authors indicate that mazdutide was associated with significant reductions in percentage body weight (mean difference –12.42%), absolute body weight (–9.76 kg), and waist circumference (–7.98 cm) compared with control conditions. Secondary cardiometabolic outcomes — including systolic blood pressure (–7.68 mmHg), total cholesterol (–0.57 mmol/L), and LDL cholesterol (–0.37 mmol/L) — also showed reductions. Adverse events were slightly more frequent in the mazdutide groups (RR = 1.12), described as mild to moderate. A dose-wise meta-regression suggested a significant dose-dependent relationship. The authors acknowledge that findings are constrained by the small number of included trials (n = 5), which limits the robustness and generalisability of conclusions.

Diabetes, obesity & metabolism · Mar 2026DOI ↗
Moderate · human

Trajectory of weight regain after cessation of GLP-1 receptor agonists: a systematic review and nonlinear meta-regression.

This systematic review and nonlinear meta-regression examined how body weight changes after people stop taking GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs), a class of medications widely used for obesity management. Researchers searched five major databases through August 2025 and identified 48 eligible studies. The core quantitative analysis focused on six randomised controlled trials (n = 3,236 participants) and applied a mixed-effects exponential recovery model to characterise the trajectory of weight regain over time. The study found that weight regain after GLP-1RA discontinuation follows a predictable, decelerating pattern: approximately 60% of treatment-related weight loss was regained within one year of stopping. The modelled plateau of regain was estimated at 75.3% (95% CI 68.9–81.6%) of lost weight, suggesting a residual but substantially attenuated long-term benefit. The rate constant of 0.0302 per week corresponded to a regain half-life of roughly 23 weeks. Secondary outcomes (HbA1c, systolic blood pressure) were explored but not the primary focus. Limitations include that most included studies carried moderate risk of bias, weight trajectories beyond 52 weeks were extrapolated rather than directly observed, and heterogeneity across study populations, GLP-1RA agents, and treatment durations may affect generalisability.

EClinicalMedicine · Mar 2026DOI ↗
Moderate · human

Comparative Efficacy and Safety of Glucagon Receptor Agonists on Metabolic Outcomes: A Network Meta-Analysis of Randomised Controlled Trials.

This network meta-analysis systematically evaluated the comparative efficacy and safety of four investigational glucagon receptor agonist (GRA)-based agents — retatrutide, cotadutide, mazdutide, and survodutide — in adults with type 2 diabetes, overweight, or obesity. Researchers searched PubMed, Cochrane, Embase, and Scopus, ultimately including 14 randomised controlled trials analyzed using frequentist network meta-analysis with random-effects models. Key outcomes included absolute and percent body weight change, HbA1c reduction, adverse events, and treatment discontinuation due to adverse events. The study found that retatrutide produced the greatest absolute weight reduction versus placebo (MD −13.44 kg), followed by survodutide (MD −10.74 kg) and mazdutide (MD −6.47 kg); cotadutide's effect did not reach statistical significance. Retatrutide also showed the largest HbA1c reduction, though only its effect was statistically significant among the agents. Regarding tolerability, mazdutide demonstrated the most favorable safety profile, while retatrutide and cotadutide were associated with comparatively lower tolerability. The authors acknowledge limitations inherent to network meta-analysis, including reliance on early- and mid-phase trial data and the absence of direct head-to-head comparisons between agents.

Endocrinology, diabetes & metabolism · Mar 2026DOI ↗
Moderate · human

Trends in 1-year persistence and adherence among initiators of high-potency, weight loss-indicated glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists.

This large retrospective cohort study examined real-world trends in 1-year treatment persistence and adherence among commercially insured adults without diabetes who newly initiated high-potency, weight loss-indicated GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs) — specifically semaglutide (Wegovy) and tirzepatide (Zepbound) — between January 2021 and June 2024. Using integrated medical and pharmacy claims data from approximately 17.9 million members, researchers identified 33,607 eligible new initiators. The study found that 1-year persistence nearly doubled over the observation period, rising from 33.2% in 2021 to 60.9% in the first half of 2024. Tirzepatide demonstrated notably higher persistence (approximately 64%) compared to semaglutide during overlapping availability years. The authors suggest that resolution of GLP-1RA product shortages, improved side effect and dose escalation management, and lifestyle support programs may have contributed to improving persistence trends. Key limitations include reliance on claims data (which cannot capture clinical nuance or patient-reported reasons for discontinuation), a commercially insured-only population limiting generalizability, and the inability to distinguish voluntary discontinuation from access-related gaps. The authors call for further research into discontinuation reasons and long-term cost-effectiveness.

Journal of managed care & specialty pharmacy · Mar 2026DOI ↗
Moderate · human

Comparative efficacy of tirzepatide and glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists on cardiovascular outcomes in patients with type 2 diabetes: a systematic review and network meta-analysis.

This systematic review and frequentist network meta-analysis (NMA) examined the comparative cardiovascular efficacy of tirzepatide (a dual GIP/GLP-1 receptor agonist) versus GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs) and placebo in adults with type 2 diabetes (T2D) and established or high-risk atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD). Eleven randomized controlled trials were included — ten evaluating GLP-1RAs and one evaluating tirzepatide (SURPASS-CVOT). In the class-level analysis, the study found that tirzepatide was associated with statistically significant reductions in MACE, cardiovascular mortality, all-cause mortality, non-fatal myocardial infarction, and non-fatal stroke compared to placebo. In the agent-level analysis, tirzepatide reduced MACE compared to placebo and lixisenatide specifically, while appearing broadly comparable to other individual GLP-1RAs. Subgroup and leave-one-out sensitivity analyses were consistent with primary findings. A key limitation is that only one tirzepatide RCT (SURPASS-CVOT) was available, constraining direct head-to-head NMA comparisons between tirzepatide and individual GLP-1RAs and reducing the precision of tirzepatide-specific estimates. The authors concluded that tirzepatide may provide cardiovascular benefit at least comparable to established GLP-1RAs, though this inference is based on indirect comparisons.

Cardiovascular diabetology · Feb 2026DOI ↗
Moderate · human

Effects of GLP-1 receptor agonists on copeptin in euvolemic participants.

This secondary analysis pooled data from two randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trials to examine whether the GLP-1 receptor agonist (RA) dulaglutide affects copeptin — a stable surrogate marker for vasopressin (antidiuretic hormone) — in euvolemic individuals. A total of 54 participants were included: 34 with primary polydipsia and 20 healthy volunteers. Participants received three weeks of either subcutaneous dulaglutide or saline placebo once weekly before crossing over. Fasting blood samples for copeptin were collected after each treatment phase. The study found that dulaglutide was associated with a statistically significant suppression of copeptin levels, with a median within-subject difference of −0.7 pmol/L (p = .047), representing approximately a 12% reduction relative to placebo. This effect was not significantly correlated with dulaglutide-related changes in blood pressure, BMI, or nausea frequency. The authors suggest this finding may help explain GLP-1's known role in fluid and sodium homeostasis. Key limitations include the secondary-analysis design (not pre-specified as the primary outcome), modest sample size, a mixed population (healthy and polydipsic participants), and the reliance on copeptin as a proxy rather than directly measured vasopressin.

European journal of endocrinology · Feb 2026DOI ↗
Moderate · human

Effect of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists on heart rate in non-diabetic individuals with overweight or obesity: a systematic review and pairwise and network meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.

This systematic review and meta-analysis examined the association between glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs) and heart rate (HR) changes in people with overweight or obesity who do not have diabetes. Researchers searched four major databases (PubMed, Web of Science, Embase, and Cochrane Library) and ultimately included 12 randomized controlled trials. Using both pairwise and network meta-analysis methods, the study calculated mean differences (MDs) in HR compared to placebo. Pairwise meta-analysis found that all analyzed GLP-1RAs — including liraglutide, semaglutide, orforglipron, oral semaglutide, tirzepatide, retatrutide, and the drug class overall — were associated with statistically significant increases in heart rate versus placebo. Network meta-analysis, which allows indirect comparisons across agents, suggested that orforglipron 36 mg was associated with the most pronounced HR increase, while tirzepatide 5 mg showed the least increase (and its result was not statistically significant). Key limitations include the indirect nature of network comparisons, variability in trial designs and follow-up durations, and the restriction to a non-diabetic population, which limits generalizability. The clinical significance of the observed HR increases was not fully addressed.

European journal of medical research · Jan 2026DOI ↗
Moderate · human

Dulaglutide Effect on Proteins Associated With CKD Progression.

This post hoc analysis of the AWARD-7 randomized controlled trial examined how dulaglutide (a GLP-1 receptor agonist) affects plasma concentrations of 21 Joslin Kidney Panel (JKP) proteins—biomarkers previously linked to end-stage kidney disease (ESKD) risk—in adults with type 2 diabetes and moderate-to-severe chronic kidney disease (CKD). Researchers used the Joslin OLINK proteomic platform to compare changes in protein concentrations from baseline to 6 months between participants receiving once-weekly dulaglutide (n=124) and those receiving insulin glargine (n=125). The study found that 14 of the 21 JKP proteins increased in the insulin glargine group but decreased in the dulaglutide group, with statistically significant between-group differences. The most notable differences involved 8 TNF-receptor superfamily members, which play roles in inflammation and apoptosis. Additional proteins—including CD160, WFDC2, DLL1, LAYN, SYND1, and EPHA2—also differed significantly between groups. Effects were more pronounced in participants with lower kidney function, higher albuminuria, higher HbA1c, or higher BMI at baseline. The authors suggest these proteomic changes may help explain the kidney-protective effects observed with dulaglutide in AWARD-7. Key limitations include the post hoc, exploratory design, the 6-month follow-up window, and lack of adjustment for multiple comparisons.

Kidney international reports · Jan 2026DOI ↗
Moderate · human

Mazdutide versus placebo in Chinese adults with type 2 diabetes.

This Phase 3 randomized controlled trial evaluated mazdutide, a dual glucagon receptor (GCGR) and GLP-1 receptor (GLP-1R) agonist, as monotherapy versus placebo in 320 Chinese adults with type 2 diabetes (T2D) inadequately controlled by diet and exercise. Participants had a mean HbA1c of 8.24% and BMI of 28.2 kg/m². They were randomized 1:1:1 to weekly subcutaneous injections of mazdutide (4 mg or 6 mg) or placebo for 24 weeks, followed by a 24-week mazdutide extension phase. At week 24, the study found that both mazdutide doses significantly reduced HbA1c versus placebo (−1.57% and −2.15% for 4 mg and 6 mg, respectively, vs. −0.14% for placebo). Both doses also produced significantly greater body weight reductions and improved rates of composite endpoints (HbA1c <7.0% with ≥5% weight loss) compared to placebo. The most common adverse events—diarrhea, decreased appetite, and nausea—were consistent with the GLP-1R agonist class. Limitations include the single-ethnicity population (Chinese adults), the relatively short 24-week primary endpoint period, and the lack of an active comparator arm, which limits generalizability and comparative effectiveness conclusions.

Nature · Dec 2025DOI ↗
Moderate · human

Mazdutide versus dulaglutide in Chinese adults with type 2 diabetes.

This Phase III randomized controlled trial evaluated mazdutide, a novel once-weekly dual glucagon and GLP-1 receptor agonist, compared to dulaglutide in 731 Chinese adults with type 2 diabetes (T2D) on background oral anti-diabetic therapy. Participants were randomized 1:1:1 to one of two mazdutide doses or dulaglutide (1.5 mg) for 28 weeks. The study found that both mazdutide doses demonstrated non-inferiority and superiority to dulaglutide in reducing HbA1c from baseline, with least-squares mean treatment differences of -0.24% and -0.30% for the lower and higher doses, respectively. Mazdutide also produced significantly greater reductions in body weight than dulaglutide, with differences of -3.78% and -5.76% for the two doses. The safety profile was generally acceptable, though gastrointestinal adverse events occurred more frequently with mazdutide than dulaglutide. Limitations include the relatively short 28-week duration, restriction to a Chinese population, and the lack of a placebo arm, which may limit generalizability of findings.

Nature · Dec 2025DOI ↗
Moderate · human

CagriSema Reduces Blood Pressure in Adults With Overweight or Obesity: REDEFINE 1.

The REDEFINE 1 trial was a phase 3a, 68-week randomized controlled trial that evaluated the blood pressure (BP) effects of CagriSema (a fixed-dose combination of semaglutide 2.4 mg and cagrilintide 2.4 mg) in 3,417 adults without diabetes who had overweight or obesity, with or without obesity-related complications. Participants were randomized to once-weekly CagriSema, semaglutide alone, cagrilintide alone, or placebo, alongside lifestyle intervention. Secondary and post hoc analyses focused on antihypertensive outcomes. The study found that CagriSema was associated with greater reductions in systolic BP (−10.9 vs. −2.8 mmHg) and diastolic BP (−5.4 vs. −1.7 mmHg) compared to placebo at week 68. A higher proportion of CagriSema participants reached BP targets (63.0% vs. 32.0%). Among those with resistant hypertension at baseline, BP target attainment was 42.0% vs. 29.3% (OR 1.7; 95% CI 0.7–4.4), though the confidence interval crossed 1. Notably, 39.6% of CagriSema participants on antihypertensive medications reduced or stopped treatment versus 18.8% with placebo. Limitations include that BP outcomes were secondary/post hoc endpoints, not primary, which limits causal inference strength for these specific findings.

Hypertension (Dallas, Tex. : 1979) · Dec 2025DOI ↗
Moderate · human

Efficacy and Safety of Retatrutide in the Treatment of Diabetes and/or Obesity Comorbid with Chronic Kidney disease: a Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluated the efficacy and safety of retatrutide — a novel triple agonist (GIP/GLP-1/glucagon receptor) — specifically in patients with type 2 diabetes and/or obesity comorbid with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Researchers conducted a comprehensive literature search and ultimately included eight randomized controlled trials. The study found that retatrutide was associated with a statistically significant mean reduction in HbA1c of -1.04% (95% CI: -1.42 to -0.67) and body weight reductions of up to -24.2%. A subgroup analysis suggested a dose-dependent pattern in glycemic outcomes, with lower doses appearing to produce greater HbA1c reductions than higher doses, though this finding warrants cautious interpretation. Secondary analyses indicated possible renoprotective effects, reflected by reductions in albuminuria. Gastrointestinal adverse events were the most commonly reported safety concern, consistent with the broader drug class. Key limitations include the small number of included studies (n=8), potential heterogeneity across trials, and the fact that CKD-specific data may have been drawn from subgroup analyses of broader trials rather than CKD-dedicated studies. The overall evidence base for retatrutide in CKD patients remains early-stage.

Maedica · Dec 2025DOI ↗
Moderate · humanPreprint

Cagrilintide–Semaglutide Combination Therapy Versus Monotherapy or Placebo: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

This systematic review and meta-analysis (PROSPERO-registered) pooled data from four randomized controlled trials (n = 4,810 adults with overweight or obesity) to compare the fixed-dose combination of cagrilintide and semaglutide (CagriSema) against semaglutide alone, cagrilintide alone, or placebo. The authors found that, across all comparators, CagriSema was associated with statistically greater percent body weight reduction: approximately 7.4 percentage points more than semaglutide, 8.8 percentage points more than cagrilintide, and 13.9 percentage points more than placebo. The likelihood of achieving ≥15% or ≥20% weight loss was reported to be 2–3 times higher with the combination. Waist circumference was also significantly reduced with CagriSema versus placebo (mean difference approximately −10.9 cm). No consistent differences in HbA1c were observed across comparisons. Gastrointestinal adverse events were more frequent with CagriSema, and treatment discontinuation rates were correspondingly higher in the combination group. Limitations include the small number of included trials (four), preprint status introducing risk of non-peer-reviewed data, and potential heterogeneity across trial designs and populations.

Unknown journal · Nov 2025DOI ↗
Moderate · human

Gastrointestinal Adverse Effects of Anti-Obesity Medications in Non-Diabetic Adults: A Systematic Review.

This systematic review, following PRISMA 2020 guidelines, examined the frequency, severity, and types of gastrointestinal (GI) adverse effects associated with anti-obesity medications in non-diabetic adults with obesity. Researchers searched PubMed, Google Scholar, BMJ, and Web of Science through July 2025, ultimately including 12 studies from 733 screened articles. The evidence base included one large cohort of 18,386 participants alongside smaller randomized and observational trials. The review found that nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and constipation were the most frequently reported GI symptoms, occurring predominantly with GLP-1 receptor agonists such as semaglutide and tirzepatide, particularly during dose escalation phases. Orlistat was commonly associated with steatorrhea and flatulence, while phentermine was linked to reduced GI motility. Newer investigational agents, including retatrutide and orforglipron, also demonstrated notable GI side effect profiles. Natural products and other investigational agents reported fewer adverse events but lacked long-term data and standardized reporting. Key limitations include heterogeneity in study designs and inconsistent GI outcome reporting across included studies. The authors concluded that GI side effects are common but generally mild to moderate, and that standardized reporting and proactive clinical management strategies may improve patient adherence and tolerability.

Medicina (Kaunas, Lithuania) · Nov 2025DOI ↗
Moderate · humanPreprint

Efficacy of Mazdutide in Nondiabetic Adults with Overweight or Obesity: A Meta-Analysis

This meta-analysis pooled data from four randomized controlled trials (n = 918) to evaluate the efficacy of mazdutide — a dual GLP-1 and glucagon receptor agonist — in nondiabetic adults with overweight or obesity. Researchers searched PubMed, Scopus, and Web of Science and applied a random-effects model to analyze primary outcomes including body weight, BMI, and waist circumference, along with secondary cardiometabolic markers. The pooled analysis found that, compared with placebo, mazdutide was associated with statistically significant reductions in body weight (mean difference: −7.72 kg), BMI (−2.84 units), waist circumference (−5.76 cm), HbA1c (−0.30%), LDL cholesterol (−10.59 mg/dL), total cholesterol (−18.61 mg/dL), and triglycerides (−49.87 mg/dL). The authors concluded that mazdutide shows promise as a pharmacotherapy option for this population. Key limitations include the small number of included trials (n = 4), the relatively modest total sample size, the lack of long-term follow-up data, and the preprint status of this analysis, meaning it has not yet undergone formal peer review. Findings should therefore be interpreted with caution pending publication.

Unknown journal · Oct 2025DOI ↗
Moderate · humanPreprint

Efficacy of Thymosin Alpha 1 Combined with Sivelestat and Ambroxol in Elderly Sepsis-Associated ARDS: A Randomized Trial

This single-center randomized controlled trial enrolled 171 elderly patients with sepsis-associated acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS) to evaluate whether adding thymosin alpha 1 (Tα1) to a background regimen of sivelestat sodium and ambroxol improved outcomes. Participants were assigned to a control group (sivelestat + ambroxol, n=86) or an experimental group (same regimen plus Tα1, n=85) for 7 days; all patients also received high-flow nasal cannula oxygen therapy. The study found that the experimental group demonstrated a higher overall clinical response rate (85.9% vs. 72.1%, P<0.05), reduced mortality, improved survival, and better respiratory function parameters compared with controls. Safety profiles were reported as favorable in both groups. Limitations include the single-center design, which may reduce generalizability; the relatively short 7-day intervention window; and the fact that the paper is a preprint, meaning it has not yet undergone formal peer review. The combination of co-interventions (sivelestat and ambroxol alongside Tα1) also makes it difficult to isolate the independent contribution of Tα1 to the observed outcomes.

Unknown journal · Sep 2025DOI ↗
Moderate · human

Efficacy and Safety of Glucagon-Like Peptide-1 (GLP-1) Receptor Agonists for Spinal Fusion Outcomes: A Comprehensive Meta-Analysis.

This meta-analysis systematically reviewed the evidence on GLP-1 receptor agonists (e.g., semaglutide, liraglutide) in patients undergoing spinal fusion surgery. Following Cochrane guidelines, the authors searched five major databases and included 11 studies encompassing 14,344 participants, assessing outcomes such as pseudoarthrosis, readmission, acute kidney injury (AKI), cerebrovascular accidents, and deep vein thrombosis. Quality assessment used the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale, and statistical analysis was performed with RevMan 5.4 using risk ratios for dichotomous outcomes. The study found that GLP-1 receptor agonist use was associated with a statistically significant reduction in pseudoarthrosis at both six months (RR = 0.63) and 12 months (RR = 0.64), but this benefit was not sustained at 24 months (RR = 1.03). GLP-1 receptor agonists were also associated with a significantly increased risk of AKI (RR = 1.30). No significant differences were observed for readmission, stroke, deep vein thrombosis, or reoperation rates. Subgroup analysis by diabetic status provided additional insights. Key limitations include the absence of randomized controlled trials among included studies, significant heterogeneity in several outcomes, variability in outcome definitions, and relatively short follow-up periods. The authors call for larger, well-designed RCTs to confirm these findings.

Cureus · Sep 2025DOI ↗
Moderate · human

Efficacy and safety of survodutide on glycemic control and weight loss in adults: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

This systematic review and meta-analysis pooled data from six randomized controlled trials (RCTs) involving 1,272 adults to evaluate the efficacy and safety of survodutide, a glucagon/GLP-1 receptor co-agonist peptide, for glycemic control and weight loss. Compared with placebo, the study found that survodutide was associated with statistically significant reductions in HbA1c, fasting glucagon levels, body weight, and waist circumference. Subgroup analyses suggested that higher total weekly doses and longer treatment durations (greater than 16 weeks) were associated with more pronounced effects on body weight and waist circumference, while greater HbA1c reductions were linked to higher doses. Secondary outcomes including BMI, total cholesterol, triglycerides, and blood pressure also showed modest reductions. On the safety side, survodutide was associated with a significantly higher risk of treatment discontinuation due to adverse events, with gastrointestinal events being the most frequently reported, though serious adverse events did not increase significantly. Limitations include the small number of included trials (six), limited participant diversity, and varying treatment durations across studies. The authors call for larger, longer, multicenter RCTs to confirm these findings across broader populations.

Diabetes, obesity & metabolism · Sep 2025DOI ↗
Moderate · human

Efficacy of thymosin α1 for sepsis: a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials.

This systematic review and meta-analysis evaluated the efficacy of thymosin α1 (Tα1), a synthetic immunomodulatory peptide, in treating sepsis. Researchers searched for prospective clinical studies measuring 28-day mortality in sepsis patients treated with Tα1 (excluding combination therapy studies), ultimately including 11 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) totaling 1,927 patients. The overall meta-analysis found a statistically significant reduction in 28-day mortality associated with Tα1 (OR 0.73, 95% CI: 0.59–0.90). However, when analysis was restricted to high-quality trials or multicenter trials — considered more rigorous subsets — the mortality benefit was no longer statistically significant (ORs 0.82 and 0.86, respectively). A heterogeneity of treatment effects analysis drawing on individual patient data from two large multicenter RCTs (representing ~75% of total patients) suggested potential benefits in subgroups with cancer (moderate credibility), diabetes, and coronary heart disease (both low credibility). Trial sequential analysis indicated the current evidence base is underpowered. The authors concluded that while Tα1 shows potential, its benefits appear to vary across patient subgroups, and personalized immunotherapy approaches warrant investigation in future, adequately powered trials.

Frontiers in cellular and infection microbiology · Sep 2025DOI ↗
Moderate · human

Evaluating the Rates of Pancreatitis and Pancreatic Cancer Among GLP-1 Receptor Agonists: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Randomised Controlled Trials.

This systematic review and meta-analysis examined the risk of pancreatitis and pancreatic cancer associated with GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs), including dulaglutide, exenatide, liraglutide, semaglutide, beinaglutide, retatrutide, and tirzepatide. Following PRISMA guidelines, the authors searched PubMed, Embase, and the Cochrane Library, ultimately including 62 randomised controlled trials encompassing 66,232 patients with a mean age of 58.3 years and a mean follow-up of approximately 43.5 weeks. The pooled analysis found a statistically significant increase in pancreatitis risk overall (RR: 1.44, 95% CI 1.09–1.89); however, this significance disappeared when results were stratified by background medication use, suggesting that concomitant medications may be a confounding factor. For pancreatic cancer, no significant overall association was identified (RR: 1.30, 95% CI 0.86–1.97), though a significant signal emerged in the subgroup taking background medications (RR: 1.85, 95% CI 1.05–3.26). The authors note this subgroup finding may be an artifact, as many excluded trials had zero events in both arms. Key limitations include variable follow-up durations, heterogeneous patient populations, and the influence of concomitant therapies, which complicate causal attribution to GLP-1 RAs alone.

Endocrinology, diabetes & metabolism · Sep 2025DOI ↗