Review
This review synthesizes evidence from randomized controlled trials and high-quality meta-analyses on approved and investigational obesity medications, examining their effects beyond weight loss alone. Medications reviewed include phentermine-topiramate, naltrexone-bupropion, GLP-1 receptor agonists (liraglutide, semaglutide), and newer multiagonist agents (tirzepatide, survodutide, mazdutide, retatrutide, cagrilintide-semaglutide, and amycretin). The authors evaluated impacts across a broad range of obesity-related comorbidities, including type 2 diabetes, metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease, chronic kidney disease, heart failure, cardiovascular disease, obstructive sleep apnea, polycystic ovary syndrome, osteoarthritis, muscle mass, depression, quality of life, food cravings, binge-eating disorders, substance use disorders, and neurodegenerative diseases. The review concludes that GLP-1-based and multiagonist therapies demonstrate beneficial effects across these conditions. Notably, the authors report that while many benefits appear to be mediated through weight reduction, accumulating evidence suggests weight loss-independent mechanisms, particularly for GLP-1 receptor agonist-based therapies. Key limitations include its reliance on synthesized rather than primary data and variability in evidence quality across the individual conditions reviewed.
The lancet. Diabetes & endocrinology · May 2026DOI ↗ Review
This narrative review examines the relationship between diabetes mellitus (DM) and stroke, and evaluates the cerebrovascular potential of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) and dual GLP-1/GIP receptor agonists (e.g., tirzepatide). The authors summarize evidence from large cardiovascular outcome trials (CVOTs), noting that agents such as semaglutide and liraglutide were associated with reductions in non-fatal stroke incidence, fewer hospitalizations, and improved neurological outcomes in patients with prior stroke or high cardiovascular risk. The review highlights that stroke reduction may represent a class effect of GLP-1 RAs, though differences between individual agents exist, attributed to variations in pharmacokinetics, receptor affinity, and study populations. Evidence in the acute stroke setting is described as preliminary, coming largely from early-phase or ongoing trials. The authors also discuss emerging agents—orforglipron, retatrutide, Maridebart cafraglutide, and CagriSema—as potential future options. Limitations acknowledged include the narrative (non-systematic) design, reliance on trial-level rather than individual patient data, and the absence of large-scale, long-term randomized trials specifically targeting post-stroke populations. The authors conclude that GLP-1-based therapies should currently be considered tools for long-term vascular risk reduction rather than established acute stroke treatments.
Pharmaceutics · May 2026DOI ↗ Review
This narrative review examines the potential role of incretin-based therapies in treating metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), a condition strongly linked to metabolic syndrome and a leading cause of chronic liver disease. The authors highlight that no approved pharmacological treatments currently exist for MASLD and that progression to advanced fibrosis poses a significant clinical challenge. The review synthesizes evidence on GLP-1 receptor agonists, which the authors report have shown efficacy in reducing hepatic steatosis, inflammation, and fibrosis-related biomarkers, largely attributed to weight loss and improved insulin sensitivity. Dual agonists such as tirzepatide (GLP-1/GIP) are described as demonstrating superior hepatic and metabolic outcomes. Emerging agents including cotadutide (GLP-1/glucagon dual agonist) and retatrutide (GLP-1/GIP/glucagon triagonist) are presented as a novel frontier, with early clinical data suggesting potent hepatoprotective effects and favorable metabolic remodeling. The authors acknowledge that evidence on fibrosis progression remains limited. As a narrative review without systematic search methodology or meta-analysis, this paper is susceptible to selection bias and does not establish causality. It provides a useful synthesis of the current landscape but should be interpreted with appropriate caution.
Medicina (Kaunas, Lithuania) · May 2026DOI ↗ Review
This narrative review synthesizes the evolution of incretin-based pharmacotherapies for metabolic disorders, drawing on literature from PubMed, Scopus, and Google Scholar up to July 2025. The authors trace the trajectory from DPP-4 inhibitors—noted for modest glycaemic benefits—through GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs) such as liraglutide and semaglutide, which pivotal trials have associated with meaningful weight loss and cardiometabolic protection, to next-generation agents. Dual GIP/GLP-1 agonist tirzepatide and triple agonist retatrutide are highlighted as demonstrating particularly substantial efficacy, with the review citing up to 24% body weight reduction alongside improvements in hepatic and inflammatory markers in included trials. Agents such as cotadutide and efinopegdutide are discussed in the context of expanding indications to MASLD and MASH. The authors acknowledge several limitations across the field: high cost and accessibility barriers, underrepresentation of low- and middle-income country populations in major trials, and pharmacogenomic variability that may modify therapeutic response. As a review, this paper does not generate new primary data. Its conclusions depend on the quality and representativeness of the underlying trials it synthesizes, and no independent meta-analytic pooling appears to have been conducted.
The Indian journal of medical research · Apr 2026DOI ↗ Review
This review examines the global burden of pediatric obesity and its cardiovascular consequences, drawing on data from PubMed, Scopus, and Springer databases. The authors report that over 381 million children worldwide are affected by obesity, and that childhood obesity substantially increases the risk of adult obesity and cardiovascular diseases (CVD) including atherosclerosis, coronary artery disease, hypertension, dysglycemia, dyslipidemia, arrhythmias, and stroke. The study identifies both genetic contributors (highlighted by genome-wide association studies) and lifestyle drivers such as physical inactivity, prolonged screen time, and poor diet. The authors evaluate public health frameworks including the WHO Global Action Plan on Physical Activity 2018–2030, as well as management strategies spanning lifestyle modification, pharmacotherapy (notably GLP-1 receptor agonists semaglutide and liraglutide), and bariatric surgery. They highlight data from the SURMOUNT-5 trial on tirzepatide and discuss emerging investigational agents including cagrilintide/semaglutide combination, orforglipron, danuglipron, and retatrutide. Gene therapy is noted as experimental. A key limitation is that this is a narrative review without systematic methodology or original data collection, limiting causal inference.
Clinical nutrition ESPEN · Mar 2026DOI ↗ Review
This narrative review examines the rapidly evolving landscape of obesity pharmacotherapy, moving beyond currently approved injectable GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs). The authors contextualize the global obesity burden—affecting over 2 billion adults—and acknowledge the transformative but limited success of existing GLP-1-based therapies, citing weight loss plateaus, high inter-individual variability, and weight regain upon discontinuation as key unresolved challenges. The review synthesizes emerging drug classes including: oral GLP-1 agonists (e.g., orforglipron) aimed at improving global accessibility; multi-receptor agonists such as triple GLP-1/GIP/glucagon agonists (e.g., retatrutide, reportedly achieving 20–24% weight reduction) and dual GLP-1/glucagon agonists (e.g., survodutide, mazdutide) with potential benefits in metabolic-associated steatotic liver disease; novel dosing strategies via GLP-1/GIP combination agents (e.g., maridebart cafraglutide); amylin pathway agents (e.g., cagrilintide, amycretin); lean-mass-preserving agents (e.g., bimagrumab); and precision approaches for monogenic obesity (e.g., setmelanotide). The authors call for phenotype-stratified trials, long-term safety data, pediatric research, and equitable implementation. As a review, it does not present original trial data and is inherently subject to selection and interpretation bias.
Metabolism open · Mar 2026DOI ↗ Review
This paper is a narrative review examining the clinical evidence on retatrutide (LY3437943), a novel triple receptor agonist targeting the glucagon receptor (GCGR), glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide receptor (GIPR), and glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP-1R). The authors conducted an electronic literature search across Scopus, PubMed/MEDLINE, and Google Scholar to synthesize available findings. According to the review, studies in people with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) reported reductions in HbA1c of up to 2.16% and fasting glucose reductions of up to 69.1 mg/dL, alongside weight loss of up to 16.94%. In individuals with overweight or obesity (without T2DM), weight loss reached up to 26.56% (approximately 24.15 kg). Additional findings included reductions in BMI, waist circumference, and systolic blood pressure in those with T2DM and overweight/obesity, as well as a relative liver fat reduction of up to 86% in subjects with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD). The most commonly reported adverse events were mild-to-moderate gastrointestinal symptoms, particularly at higher doses. The authors conclude that retatrutide's effects on glycemic control, weight, and potential pleiotropic benefits warrant further investigation through larger, longer-duration trials.
Expert review of clinical pharmacology · Mar 2026DOI ↗ Review
This review examines the landscape of next-generation glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1)-based therapeutics in clinical development for type 2 diabetes and obesity, building on the established success of semaglutide and tirzepatide. The authors survey a broad range of investigational agents that target multiple gastro-entero-pancreatic hormone receptors simultaneously — including GIP, glucagon, amylin, and peptide YY receptors — to produce synergistic effects on energy intake, storage, and expenditure. Specific agents discussed include maridebart cafraglutide (GLP-1 agonism/GIP antagonism), survodutide and mazdutide (GLP-1/glucagon coagonists), cagrilintide combined with semaglutide (CagriSema), amycretin (amylin/GLP-1 dual agent), and retatrutide (GIP/GLP-1/glucagon triple agonist). The review also highlights the emergence of oral small-molecule GLP-1 receptor agonists such as danuglipron and orforglipron, which resist enzymatic degradation and may improve patient convenience. The paper does not present original clinical trial data; it synthesizes existing preclinical and clinical development evidence. As a narrative review, it does not meta-analytically pool outcomes, and the included agents are largely at Phase 1–3 stages, meaning long-term efficacy and safety data remain limited.
Endocrine reviews · Mar 2026DOI ↗ Review
This perspective article examines retatrutide (LY3437943), a novel triple receptor agonist that simultaneously targets GLP-1, GIP, and glucagon receptors, positioning it as a significant advancement in obesity pharmacotherapy. The authors contextualize retatrutide within the broader evolution of incretin-based therapies, arguing that its multi-hormonal mechanism addresses limitations of existing GLP-1 and dual GIP/GLP-1 agonists. The article highlights Phase 2 trial findings, which reportedly demonstrated weight reductions comparable to bariatric surgery, along with potential benefits for metabolic comorbidities including non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and cardiovascular disease. The authors frame retatrutide as a proof-of-concept for rational multi-agonist peptide engineering and advocate for broader scientific engagement, health equity considerations, and proactive policy planning in anticipation of wider clinical adoption. As a perspective/review piece, this paper synthesizes existing evidence rather than presenting original trial data, and does not provide head-to-head comparisons or long-term safety data. Its conclusions are largely interpretive, and the characterization of Phase 2 findings as surgery-comparable warrants cautious interpretation pending Phase 3 results and regulatory review.
Clinical pharmacology in drug development · Jan 2026DOI ↗ Review
This review article examines the evolving landscape of engineered nutrient-stimulated hormonal (NUSH) peptide therapies for obesity and related metabolic conditions, including type 2 diabetes, metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease, and cardiovascular disease. The authors describe the mechanistic basis of GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs) and their limitations as monotherapies, then explore how dual and triple co-agonist strategies — combining GLP-1 with GIP, glucagon, amylin, or peptide YY — aim to overcome those gaps. The review highlights clinical and preclinical data for specific agents: tirzepatide (GLP-1/GIP), CagriSema (GLP-1/amylin), and retatrutide (GLP-1/GIP/glucagon), noting reported benefits in weight reduction, glycemic control, liver health, cardiovascular outcomes, and inflammation. The paper also discusses non-peptidyl oral GLP-1 RAs such as orforglipron as adherence-improving alternatives. The authors frame these multi-agonist therapies as a paradigm shift analogous to the pleiotropic hormonal effects of bariatric surgery, and as building blocks for precision metabolic medicine. As a narrative review, it does not generate new primary data, and conclusions depend on the quality and heterogeneity of the underlying cited studies.
Clinical and molecular hepatology · Nov 2025DOI ↗ Review
This narrative review examines the current and emerging landscape of GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs) as treatments for obesity and related metabolic conditions. The authors survey the three FDA-approved agents for obesity—liraglutide, semaglutide, and tirzepatide—alongside off-label options, summarizing evidence for their efficacy in weight reduction and glycemic control. The review also discusses expanding indications, including potential benefits in neurodegenerative disorders, fatty liver disease, dyslipidemia, atherosclerosis, cardiovascular disease, chronic kidney disease, and heart failure. Emerging pipeline agents—such as CagriSema, orforglipron, mazdutide, retatrutide, and survodutide—are highlighted alongside innovations like ultralong-acting formulations, combination therapies, higher-dose oral delivery, and AI-integrated drug development. The authors note that generic liraglutide and evolving insurance coverage may reshape affordability and access. Key limitations acknowledged include adherence challenges, safety concerns, disparities in global access, and the need for long-term data on sustained weight loss and disease modification. As a narrative review, the paper synthesizes existing literature rather than generating new primary data, and conclusions are therefore subject to the quality and selection of included studies.
Journal of obesity · Nov 2025DOI ↗ Review
This narrative review synthesizes the current landscape of FDA-approved and investigational pharmacotherapies for obesity management. The authors examine six approved long-term agents — orlistat, phentermine/topiramate, naltrexone/bupropion, liraglutide, semaglutide, and tirzepatide — covering their mechanisms of action, pivotal efficacy data, safety profiles, indications, and prescribing considerations. The review notes that semaglutide and tirzepatide have substantially raised expectations for pharmacological weight loss compared to older agents. Emerging investigational compounds, including oral GLP-1 receptor agonists such as orforglipron and multireceptor agonists such as retatrutide, are highlighted as showing even greater early-phase efficacy signals. Common safety considerations discussed include gastrointestinal adverse effects, gallbladder events, pancreatitis risk, thyroid C-cell tumor warnings, teratogenicity, and cost and access barriers. The authors emphasize that patient selection should be guided by BMI, comorbidities, and contraindications. Key limitations acknowledged by the review include a lack of direct head-to-head comparative trials, limited long-term cardiovascular outcomes data, and questions about weight durability after treatment discontinuation. The authors identify these gaps as priorities for future research.
Review
This updated narrative review examines the efficacy and safety of anti-obesity medications (AOMs) in patients with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) and its progressive form, metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH). The authors synthesize evidence on several pharmacologic classes, with particular focus on incretin-based therapies. GLP-1 receptor agonists, specifically liraglutide and semaglutide, are reported to reduce hepatic steatosis, improve liver enzyme profiles, and attenuate fibrosis progression. Tirzepatide, a dual GLP-1/GIP agonist, is noted to produce superior weight loss compared to GLP-1 monotherapy, though data on hepatic histological outcomes in MASLD/MASH remain limited. Retatrutide, a triple GLP-1/GIP/glucagon agonist, showed the most pronounced metabolic effects overall, but its liver-specific histological impact is described as underexplored. The review also flags safety concerns with other AOMs such as bupropion-naltrexone and phentermine-topiramate, citing potential hepatotoxicity risks. The authors note that advanced MASLD may alter drug pharmacokinetics, complicating treatment decisions. Key limitations include the review's narrative design, heterogeneity of cited primary studies, and a general lack of large-scale, liver-histology-focused trials for newer agents.
World journal of gastroenterology · Oct 2025DOI ↗ Review
This scoping review examined the potential role of incretin mimetics — specifically GLP-1 receptor agonists (e.g., semaglutide), dual GLP-1/GIP receptor agonists (e.g., tirzepatide), and the investigational triple agonist retatrutide — as treatments for polycystic ovarian syndrome (PCOS). Following PRISMA guidelines and drawing on literature from EBSCO Medline and PubMed, the authors explored how these agents compare to traditional PCOS pharmacotherapy such as metformin and estradiol-progesterone combination pills. The review found that all three classes of incretin mimetics were associated with meaningful improvements in weight loss and insulin sensitivity relative to conventional treatments. Dual- and triple-acting agonists, which additionally target the GIP receptor, appeared to produce greater reductions in weight and improvements in insulin sensitivity than GLP-1-only agents. Some included studies also reported PCOS-specific symptom improvements, such as reductions in dysmenorrhea and changes in ovarian morphology. The authors note that the precise mechanisms by which incretin mimetics may address the hormonal dysregulation of PCOS remain unclear, and they call for further research to optimize the integration of these agents with existing standard-of-care therapies. Key limitations include the scoping review design, heterogeneity of included studies, and limited long-term human trial data.
Review
This review paper examines the challenge of preserving muscle mass during weight loss induced by GLP-1–based pharmacotherapies, including GLP-1 receptor agonists (e.g., semaglutide), dual GLP-1/GIP agonists (e.g., tirzepatide), and triple GLP-1/GIP/glucagon agonists (e.g., retatrutide). The authors note that while these agents can produce clinically meaningful weight loss (5–10% or more of body weight), a portion of that loss comes from lean mass, including skeletal muscle, which may contribute to long-term weight regain and increase the risk of sarcopenia. The paper discusses the biology of myokines—over 600 signaling proteins released during muscle contraction identified in human myocyte research—as potentially important targets for protecting or expanding muscle mass. The authors explore emerging anti-obesity agents and their potential combinations with incretin-based therapies to preferentially reduce fat mass while sparing or building muscle. The paper calls for further research to clarify the functional consequences of lean mass changes during weight loss and maintenance. As a narrative review, it synthesizes existing literature without conducting original trials, and no new clinical data are presented. Generalizability is limited by the review format and the evolving evidence base for newer agents.
World journal of diabetes · Sep 2025DOI ↗ Review
This review examines the evolving pharmacological landscape for obesity management, with a focus on gut-brain axis hormones and their therapeutic potential. The authors describe how nutrient-stimulated gastroenteropancreatic hormones — including GLP-1, GIP, glucagon, and amylin — have become central targets in obesity drug development. The review covers both marketed agents and those in ongoing clinical trials. GLP-1 receptor agonists (e.g., weekly injectable or daily oral semaglutide) are reported to achieve roughly 15–17% weight loss with a favorable safety profile. The dual GLP-1/GIP agonist tirzepatide is described as achieving up to approximately 22.5% weight loss at higher doses. Combination therapies under investigation — such as cagrilintide plus semaglutide (Cagrisema), GLP-1/glucagon co-agonists, and the triple agonist retatrutide (GLP-1/GIP/glucagon) — are noted as potentially reaching weight loss comparable to bariatric surgery. The review also discusses cardiometabolic benefits and challenges around long-term treatment adherence for both patients and clinicians. As a narrative review, it synthesizes existing trial data rather than generating new primary evidence, and conclusions depend on the quality of the underlying studies cited.
Medicina clinica · Aug 2025DOI ↗ Review
This evidence review examines the evolving landscape of incretin-based pharmacotherapy, focusing on GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs) and newer multi-receptor co-agonists for cardiometabolic disease management. The paper surveys established GLP-1RAs — including liraglutide, dulaglutide, albiglutide, exenatide, and semaglutide — noting their reported benefits on glycated hemoglobin, body weight, lipid profiles, liver fat, and cardiovascular outcomes (reduction in major adverse cardiovascular events, or MACE). It also covers emerging agents: dual GIP/GLP-1 agonist tirzepatide (approved for diabetes and obesity), dual GLP-1/glucagon co-agonists (notable for synergistic weight loss), and triple GLP-1/GIP/glucagon receptor agonists such as retatrutide and efocipegtrutide, described as achieving the highest pharmacotherapy-associated weight loss observed to date. Additional novel classes reviewed include GLP-1/amylin agonists (CagriSema, Amycretin), non-semaglutide oral GLP-1 agents, and peptide YY/GLP-1 dual agonists. As a narrative review, the paper does not present original trial data, and its conclusions are based on synthesized existing literature, which may introduce selection bias. The authors anticipate that metabolic benefits will translate into cardiometabolic outcomes, though direct evidence for many newer agents remains limited.
World journal of cardiology · Aug 2025DOI ↗ Review
This review examines the rationale and emerging clinical evidence for triple receptor agonist therapies targeting GLP-1, GIP, and glucagon receptors as next-generation treatments for obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2D). The authors focus primarily on retatrutide, the most clinically advanced triple agonist, which has completed Phase 2 trials. In people with obesity, retatrutide achieved up to 24.2% mean weight loss over 48 weeks; in people with T2D, it produced 16.9% mean weight loss over 36 weeks, alongside a 2.2% reduction in HbA1c and 82% of participants reaching HbA1c ≤ 6.5%. The review also highlights improvements in blood pressure, lipid profiles, waist circumference, and liver fat (82% reduction in hepatic steatosis). Gastrointestinal side effects were the most commonly reported adverse events, with no major safety signals identified in Phase 2. The authors also briefly discuss other unimolecular triple agonists and combination regimens in development. Key limitations include that this is a narrative review of Phase 2 data; Phase 3 confirmatory trials are still ongoing. Conclusions about long-term efficacy, safety, and cardiovascular/renal outcomes remain premature pending those results.
Current cardiovascular risk reports · Jul 2025DOI ↗ Review
This review article, published as part of a special issue on GLP-1 receptor agonists, examines the emerging class of glucagon receptor (GCGR)-based multi-agonist drugs as pharmacological treatments for obesity. The authors discuss several investigational agents — mazdutide, pemvidutide, survodutide, and retatrutide — all of which are in advanced stages of clinical development. According to the review, early-phase trial data for these agents suggest they can produce significant weight loss, potentially exceeding that seen with currently available therapies. The article also highlights their potential to address obesity-related comorbidities such as type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular disease, and notes that some agents are being evaluated in cardiovascular outcomes trials. The authors position GCGR-based multi-agonists as potentially important additions to future obesity treatment guidelines, particularly for patients who have not responded adequately to existing medications or lifestyle interventions. Key limitations and considerations noted include cost, access, and the need for long-term safety data as these drugs progress toward regulatory approval. As a narrative review, this article synthesizes existing trial data but does not generate new primary evidence.
Drugs in context · Jul 2025DOI ↗ Review
This review article provides a comprehensive overview of approved and emerging hormone-based anti-obesity medications (AOMs), situating them within the broader context of obesity as a complex, chronic, global disease. The authors summarize the current regulatory landscape, noting that the GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RAs) liraglutide and semaglutide have received FDA and EMA approval for weight management. The review also covers pipeline agents, including oral GLP-1RAs (semaglutide, danuglipron, orforglipron), the amylin receptor agonist cagrilintide (alone and in combination with semaglutide), and dual agonists such as tirzepatide (GIP/GLP-1), survodutide, mazdutide, and pemvidutide (GLP-1R/GCGR). The authors highlight tirzepatide's placebo-subtracted weight reduction of 17.8% in a 72-week RCT and retatrutide's (a GLP-1R/GCGR/GIPR tri-agonist) placebo-subtracted reduction of 22.1% in a 48-week phase-II trial. The review cautions that long-term safety and cardiovascular outcome data for many of these agents remain incomplete. As a narrative review, it does not conduct original research or meta-analysis, and conclusions are limited by the quality and heterogeneity of the underlying primary studies it synthesizes.
Indian journal of endocrinology and metabolism · Sep 2024DOI ↗