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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. 160 papers indexed and counting.

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Filtered by #tirzepatide · clear
Moderate · human

Comparative Effectiveness of CagriSegma, Semaglutide, Cagrilintide and Tirzepatide in the Management of Overweight and Obesity: A Network Meta-Analysis of Randomized Clinical Trials.

This network meta-analysis (NMA) systematically synthesized evidence from 25 randomized controlled trials across 12 interventions to compare the weight-loss efficacy and safety of four advanced anti-obesity medications — tirzepatide, semaglutide, cagrilintide, and the combination CagriSema (cagrilintide + semaglutide) — in adults with overweight or obesity. Searches were conducted across PubMed, Scopus, and Cochrane Central. Using random-effects NMA models, the study found that tirzepatide 15 mg produced the greatest mean percent body weight reduction (−17.97%), closely followed by CagriSema (−17.84%) and semaglutide 7.2 mg (−14.66%). For achieving ≥20% body weight loss, CagriSema showed the highest relative risk (RR 27.82), followed by tirzepatide 15 mg (RR 23.70). All agents increased gastrointestinal adverse events (RR 1.33–1.91) relative to placebo, with the highest treatment discontinuation seen with semaglutide 7.2 mg (RR 3.09). Serious adverse events were comparable to placebo across all regimens. Key limitations include reliance on indirect comparisons due to absence of head-to-head trials, potential heterogeneity across trial populations and follow-up durations, and the emerging/limited trial data for CagriSema specifically. The authors conclude that both tirzepatide and CagriSema represent leading options for substantial weight loss but call for direct comparative trials.

Endocrinology, diabetes & metabolism · Jul 2026DOI ↗
🧪 TrialInsufficient

Precision Obesity Medicine: Genetic Prediction of Response to GLP-1/GIP Agonists.

Registered observational trial (recruiting). Obesity is a chronic multifactorial disease with a strong genetic component. Although glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptor agonists such as semaglutide and dual glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP)/GLP-1 receptor agonists, such as tirzepatide, are highly effective treatments for obesity, substantial inter-individual variability in weight loss response remains. Genetic factors may contribute to these differences in treatment outcomes. The aim of this prospective cohort study is to investigate whether a Genetic Risk Score (GRS) and s

ClinicalTrials.gov · Jun 2026View trial ↗
🧪 TrialInsufficient

Genetic, Microbiological and Behavioral Factors in Obesity

Registered observational trial (recruiting). This study will assess the impact of genetic markers, microbiological (microbiome) and behavioral factors on tolerance, adherence and effectiveness of dual GLP1/GIP RA in the treatment of obesity. 200 consecutive patients who meet all inclusion and none of the exclusion criteria will be enrolled.

ClinicalTrials.gov · Jun 2026View trial ↗
Review

Pharmacologic Treatments With Lifestyle Modifications in Nonpregnant Adults With Overweight or Obesity in Outpatient Settings: A Living Clinical Guideline From the American College of Physicians (April 2026).

This 2026 American College of Physicians (ACP) living clinical guideline synthesizes systematic reviews on pharmacologic treatments combined with lifestyle modifications for weight management in nonpregnant adults with overweight or obesity in outpatient settings, using the GRADE framework. For adults with obesity (BMI ≥30 kg/m²), the ACP issued conditional recommendations favoring semaglutide and tirzepatide as first-line agents (moderate-certainty evidence), phentermine-topiramate as second-line (low-certainty), liraglutide as third-line (low-certainty), and naltrexone-bupropion as fourth-line (low-certainty). For adults with overweight (BMI ≥27–30 kg/m²) who also have type 2 diabetes, dyslipidemia, hypertension, obstructive sleep apnea, or cardiovascular disease, the guideline conditionally recommends semaglutide and tirzepatide as first-line and liraglutide as second-line. All recommendations are conditional, reflecting the importance of shared decision-making around benefits, harms, costs, access, comorbidities, contraindications (e.g., cardiovascular contraindication and monthly pregnancy-test requirement for phentermine-topiramate; suicidal ideation risk with naltrexone-bupropion), and patient preferences. The living guideline format signals ongoing updates as new evidence emerges.

Annals of internal medicine · Jun 2026DOI ↗
Strong · human

Benefits and Harms of Pharmacologic Treatments in Adults With Overweight or Obesity: A Living Systematic Review and Network Meta-analysis for the American College of Physicians.

This living systematic review and network meta-analysis, commissioned by the American College of Physicians, synthesized evidence from 69 randomized controlled trials involving 112,511 adults with overweight or obesity (BMI ≥25 kg/m²) to compare pharmacologic weight-management treatments. Drugs examined included GLP-1 receptor agonists (semaglutide, liraglutide, dulaglutide, exenatide, lixisenatide), dual agonists (tirzepatide, retatrutide, semaglutide-cagrilintide), and other agents (naltrexone-bupropion, phentermine, phentermine-topiramate, orforglipron), with or without lifestyle intervention. The review found that nearly all studied interventions produced greater weight loss than placebo and/or lifestyle intervention alone. Semaglutide was found to probably reduce mortality and major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE). Semaglutide and tirzepatide demonstrated the greatest weight loss in both pairwise and network meta-analyses. However, nearly all active treatments were also associated with more treatment discontinuations due to adverse events compared with placebo. The authors noted that evidence for critical outcomes such as mortality, MACE, and serious adverse events remained limited, and direct head-to-head comparisons between treatments were scarce. Thirty-seven of the 69 included studies were rated at low risk of bias. The living review design allows for ongoing evidence updates as new trials emerge.

Annals of internal medicine · Jun 2026DOI ↗
Review

Cost-Effectiveness of Pharmacologic Treatments in Adults With Overweight or Obesity: A Systematic Review for the American College of Physicians.

This systematic review, conducted for the American College of Physicians, evaluated the cost-effectiveness of pharmacologic treatments for overweight or obesity in U.S. adults. Researchers searched MEDLINE, Embase, and economic databases through October 2025, ultimately including 9 studies encompassing 42 pairwise treatment comparisons. Study quality was assessed using the CHEQUE tool, value was measured via incremental cost-effectiveness ratios (ICERs) against established willingness-to-pay thresholds, and certainty of evidence was graded using GRADE. Key findings from the 6 moderate-certainty studies suggested that liraglutide had low value compared with lifestyle modification, while phentermine-topiramate and tirzepatide showed high value versus lifestyle modification. Semaglutide demonstrated low value compared with naltrexone-bupropion and phentermine-topiramate, but high value compared with liraglutide. Important limitations include that all 9 included studies were model-based rather than empirical trial-based analyses, only 4 of 9 were at low risk of bias, none of the 42 comparisons reached high certainty, and reporting was frequently incomplete. The authors conclude that current U.S. evidence on cost-effectiveness of obesity pharmacotherapy is significantly hampered by poor study quality, restricting the strength of any conclusions that can be drawn.

Annals of internal medicine · Jun 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

Real-world and computational identification of herbal candidates associated with adverse event patterns in glucagon-like peptide-1 therapy for obesity.

This cross-sectional pharmacovigilance study analyzed 142,705 adverse event (AE) reports for GLP-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1 RAs) from the FDA Adverse Event Reporting System (2015–2025), focusing on 4,090 reports linked to obesity indications. The authors found gastrointestinal events were most common, 76% of reports involved female patients, and most events onset within 0–30 days. Semaglutide showed a distinct distribution including a higher proportion of late-onset events (≥360 days), while tirzepatide showed negative reporting odds ratios for several gastrointestinal events. Strong disproportionality signals were identified for biliary, pancreatic, renal, and coagulation events. Separately, the study constructed herb-compound-target-AE networks using HERB 2.0 and the Comparative Toxicogenomics Database, applying graph convolutional network (GCN) modeling to identify herbal candidates—including Liquorice Root, Mulberry Leaf, Dahurian Angelica Root, Danshen Root, and Ginkgo Leaf—potentially associated with GLP-1 RA AE profiles. GCN performance was moderate (AUC-ROC 0.666–0.798). The authors explicitly note findings are exploratory and hypothesis-generating, with results limited by spontaneous reporting biases and computational modeling constraints. Independent experimental and clinical validation is required before any clinical application.

Scientific reports · Jun 2026DOI ↗
In vitro

Towards Sustainable Synthesis of Peptide Therapeutics via Tag-Assisted Peptide Synthesis and Aryl Selenoester Aminolysis Ligation.

This study presents a novel chemical synthesis methodology called Aryl Selenoester Aminolysis Ligation (ASAL), designed to overcome key limitations of existing peptide manufacturing approaches. Traditional solid-phase peptide synthesis (SPPS) is costly and resource-intensive, while tag-assisted peptide synthesis (TAPS) is generally restricted to peptides of 20 residues or fewer. Fragment condensation methods for longer peptides often produce problematic epimerization (structural errors). The researchers integrated ASAL into a TAPS workflow to enable convergent, fragment-based assembly of longer therapeutic peptides in solution. They demonstrated the platform by successfully synthesizing three clinically relevant peptides of increasing complexity: teriparatide (34 residues, used in osteoporosis treatment), a sulfated thrombin-inhibiting anticoagulant TTI (32 residues), and tirzepatide (39 residues, used for type 2 diabetes and weight management). The method reportedly minimized epimerization, reduced reagent and solvent consumption, and showed promise for scalability. Limitations include the study being purely a chemistry/methods paper with no biological testing in cells, animals, or humans — all findings are based on synthetic yield, purity, and chemical characterization metrics alone.

Journal of the American Chemical Society · Jun 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

Tirzepatide in type 1 diabetes: beyond mere weight loss.

This narrative review examined the clinical potential of tirzepatide — a dual agonist of the GLP-1 receptor (GLP-1R) and glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide receptor (GIPR) — specifically in type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM), a population distinct from the type 2 diabetes and obesity contexts in which tirzepatide is already established. Researchers searched PubMed/MEDLINE, Scopus, and Google Scholar through March 2026. Across the reviewed studies, tirzepatide was associated with reductions in HbA1c of up to 0.9%, body weight reductions of up to 23.4% (up to 9.0 kg/m² BMI reduction), increases in continuous glucose monitoring time-in-range (TIR) of up to 18.0% (primarily driven by reductions in time above range), and decreases in daily insulin requirements of up to 38 units/day. The authors noted that glycemic and weight benefits appeared to be partly, but not exclusively, mediated by weight loss. Key limitations acknowledged include that most available studies are observational in design, enrolled participants with overweight or obesity, and that randomized controlled trials in T1DM populations are still needed to confirm these findings.

Expert review of clinical pharmacology · Jun 2026DOI ↗
Limited · human

GLP-1-based therapy and ICD-10-documented heart failure or respiratory failure events in non-diabetic adults with rheumatoid arthritis and obesity: a TriNetX federated cohort study.

This retrospective federated cohort study used the TriNetX US Collaborative Network to examine whether GLP-1-based therapy (semaglutide or tirzepatide) was associated with lower rates of ICD-10-documented heart failure (HF) or respiratory failure (RF) in non-diabetic adults with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and obesity (BMI ≥30 kg/m²). Patients were required to have baseline disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD) use, and those with diabetes or overlapping systemic autoimmune diseases were excluded. After propensity score matching on 68 covariates (1:1), 3,483 patients remained per cohort. The study found that GLP-1-based therapy was associated with a substantially lower hazard of first post-landmark composite HF or RF events during days 91–365. In absolute terms, the primary composite occurred in 0.7% of GLP-1 users versus 1.8% of never-users, corresponding to roughly one fewer event per 100 patients. Heart failure and respiratory failure analyzed separately showed directionally consistent lower hazards, though individual event counts were small. The authors acknowledge that the findings are hypothesis-generating only, are limited by the retrospective, administrative-data design and potential residual confounding, and require prospective validation before informing clinical practice.

Clinical rheumatology · Jun 2026DOI ↗
🧪 TrialInsufficient

Tirzepatide-Based Prehabilitation Before Elective Ventral and Incisional Hernia Repair in Patients With Obesity

Registered observational trial (completed). This study evaluated whether a 16-week weight-loss program using tirzepatide before elective ventral and incisional hernia surgery could improve surgical readiness and outcomes in patients with obesity. In this retrospective multicenter study, 109 patients entered the program, and 91 completed treatment and underwent surgery. Participants achieved an average weight loss of 13.8%, and all patients who completed the program reached the target weight required for surgery. Compared with a control group of obese patients who underwent hernia repair withou

ClinicalTrials.gov · Jun 2026View trial ↗
🧪 TrialInsufficient

Estimating the Impact of Obesity Medications on Clinical and Economic Outcomes

Registered observational trial (enrolling by invitation). The goal of this observational study is to identify the impact of incretin-based obesity medications (e.g., GLP-1 and GLP-1/GIP) on health and economic outcomes among adults who get their health insurance through their employers. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. Is obesity medication usage is associated with reduced body mass index (BMI) and weight? 2. Is obesity medication usage is associated with reduced utilization of emergency department and inpatient care or obesity-related conditions over time? 3. Is obesity medication

ClinicalTrials.gov · Jun 2026View trial ↗
Limited · human

GLP-1 receptor agonist adjunct therapy stabilises Ramadan dysglycaemia in insulin-treated diabetes: a CGM-based study.

This prospective, matched controlled study used continuous glucose monitoring (CGM) via FreeStyle Libre to characterize glycaemic patterns during Ramadan 2025 in 54 adults with insulin-treated diabetes. Three matched groups of 18 participants each were compared: type 2 diabetes on basal-bolus insulin alone (BB), type 2 diabetes on basal-bolus insulin plus adjunctive semaglutide or tirzepatide (BB+), and type 1 diabetes on basal-bolus insulin. CGM data were collected over 28 days pre-Ramadan and 29 days during Ramadan. The study found that dysglycaemia was predominantly driven by the post-iftar (meal-breaking) period. The BB group showed marked deterioration in glycaemic control during non-fasting hours. In contrast, the BB+ group demonstrated significantly better time-in-range (74.4% vs. 36.8%), a lower glucose management indicator (6.9% vs. 8.3%), and an approximately 61% reduction in post-iftar glucose excursions, without increased hypoglycaemia or treatment discontinuations. Limitations include a relatively small matched sample size, a single Ramadan observational period, and non-randomized group assignment, which may introduce residual confounding despite matching.

Diabetes research and clinical practice · Jun 2026DOI ↗
🧪 TrialInsufficient

New Triple Combination Therapy in Newly Diagnosed Type 2 Diabetes

Registered Phase 3 interventional trial (not yet recruiting). The goal of this clinical trial is to learn the efficacy of combination therapy with tirzepatide, empagliflozin and pioglitazone versus standard therapy in newly diagnosed type 2 diabetes. The main objectives to achieve are: 1. To compare efficacy of the triple combination therapy against standard therapy in achieving type 2 diabetes remission in patients newly diagnosed with T2DM. 2. To compare the effects on β-cell function and glycemic control of the triple combination therapy against standard therapy in patients newly diagnosed

ClinicalTrials.gov · Jun 2026View trial ↗
Limited · humanPreprint

Semaglutide and Tirzepatide in Type 1 Diabetes: Real-World Insulin Deintensification, Cardiovascular Outcomes and Safety Assessment

This retrospective, propensity-score matched observational study used de-identified federated U.S. electronic health record (EHR) data to examine real-world associations of semaglutide (n=1,424) and tirzepatide (n=578) use in adults with type 1 diabetes (T1D) compared to 1:1 matched T1D controls (n=2,002) who did not receive these agents, over a study period from 2018–2025. Neither drug is approved for T1D. The study found that both agents were associated with statistically significant reductions in total daily insulin dose, HbA1c, and body weight at 12 and 24 months compared to controls. Greater insulin reductions were observed in semaglutide users who achieved higher weight loss or dose escalation. The pre-vs-post safety analysis identified predominantly gastrointestinal adverse events; DKA, severe hypoglycemia, pancreatitis, and retinopathy did not increase significantly overall, though patients with >30% insulin dose reduction had higher DKA rates. Semaglutide and tirzepatide exposure was associated with lower all-cause mortality and major adverse cardiovascular events versus matched controls. Key limitations include the observational design, EHR data quality constraints, off-label prescribing confounding, and preprint status, meaning findings have not yet undergone peer review.

Unknown journal · Jun 2026DOI ↗
Review

Use of second-generation incretin analogs (GLP-1 and GIP receptor agonists) in type 1 diabetes and latent autoimmune diabetes in adults: A systematic review.

This systematic review examined existing evidence on the use of second-generation incretin analogs — specifically semaglutide (a GLP-1 receptor agonist) and tirzepatide (a dual GLP-1/GIP receptor agonist) — in adults with type 1 diabetes (T1D) or latent autoimmune diabetes in adults (LADA). Researchers screened 3,053 records from six major databases and ClinicalTrials.gov, ultimately identifying 11 eligible publications. These comprised two systematic reviews, one post hoc subgroup analysis, six narrative or consensus reviews, and two LADA case reports. Three key themes emerged from the synthesis: (1) LADA is frequently misdiagnosed or diagnosis is delayed due to its heterogeneous presentation; (2) both tirzepatide and semaglutide show potential benefits in LADA and in certain T1D subtypes, particularly in individuals retaining residual beta-cell function; and (3) existing clinical management frameworks may guide practice while robust trial data are awaited. The authors concluded that current evidence is promising but moderate in quality, and that well-designed, adequately powered randomized controlled trials in clearly defined LADA and T1D populations are needed to establish long-term efficacy and safety. Notable limitations include the small number of eligible studies, the predominance of review-level and narrative publications, and only two primary patient-level reports.

Journal of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners · Jun 2026DOI ↗
🧪 TrialInsufficient

GLP-1 Therapy After Bariatric Surgery in Chinese Patients With Obesity

Registered N/A interventional trial (recruiting). Obese patients exhibit considerable heterogeneity and complex comorbidities, making long-term effective management challenging with monotherapy. While bariatric surgery remains the most effective weight-loss intervention, postoperative weight regain and metabolic deterioration remain significant concerns. glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RA) offer distinct advantages for weight loss and metabolic control, and their combination with surgery may produce synergistic effects. This study investigates the efficacy and safety of bariatr

ClinicalTrials.gov · Jun 2026View trial ↗
🧪 TrialInsufficient

Tirzepatide on Atrial Fibrillation Recurrence After Catheter Ablation in Patients With Obesity and HFpEF

Registered Phase 4 interventional trial (not yet recruiting). This multicenter, randomized, open-label, blinded-endpoint trial evaluates whether weekly subcutaneous tirzepatide for 12 months reduces atrial fibrillation (AF) recurrence after catheter ablation in adults with obesity and heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). HFpEF is diagnosed by direct intraprocedural measurement of mean left atrial pressure (mLAP ≥ 15 mmHg at rest) during the ablation procedure, providing a hemodynamically anchored, homogeneous study population free from the diagnostic ambiguities of N-termina

ClinicalTrials.gov · Jun 2026View trial ↗
Animal only

Dual GIP/GLP-1 receptor agonist tirzepatide ameliorates hepatic steatosis and inflammatory responses in a MASLD mouse model associated with the CCL2/CCR2 axis.

This mouse study investigated the molecular mechanisms by which tirzepatide (TZP), a dual GIP/GLP-1 receptor agonist, affects the liver in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD). Male C57BL/6J mice (n=32) were fed a high-fat, high-fructose (HFHFr) diet to induce MASLD and then randomized to receive no treatment, semaglutide (Sema), or TZP. Researchers combined RNA sequencing and liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry (LC-MS) to generate hepatic transcriptomic and proteomic profiles, with key targets validated by PCR and immunoblotting. The study found that HFHFr feeding produced hyperglycemia, insulin resistance, elevated liver enzymes, and hepatic steatosis and inflammation. Both TZP and Sema were associated with improvements in these parameters; TZP was associated with reductions in pro-inflammatory markers (MCP-1, IL-1β, TNF-α, GSDMD) and partial restoration of IL-10. Integrated omics analysis implicated the CCL2/CCR2 chemokine axis and PI3K-AKT signaling pathway as key molecular signatures associated with TZP's hepatic effects. Key limitations include the exclusive use of an animal model, a small sample size, and the mechanistic (non-causal) nature of omics associations.

BMC gastroenterology · Jun 2026DOI ↗
Review

Dulaglutide in the era of tirzepatide and semaglutide: reaffirming its role in contemporary cardiometabolic care.

This narrative review examines the continued clinical relevance of dulaglutide, a once-weekly GLP-1 receptor agonist, in the treatment of type 2 diabetes (T2D) amid growing adoption of newer incretin-based therapies such as semaglutide and tirzepatide. The authors synthesize evidence from major cardiovascular outcome trials, including the REWIND trial—which they highlight as the only GLP-1 receptor agonist trial to demonstrate a statistically significant reduction in major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) in a predominantly primary prevention population over more than five years—and the SURPASS-CVOT, which established tirzepatide's non-inferiority to dulaglutide for cardiovascular outcomes. The review acknowledges that semaglutide and tirzepatide show superior HbA1c reduction and weight loss compared to dulaglutide, but argues that dulaglutide's fixed-dose, no-titration regimen, established cardiovascular safety profile, real-world tolerability, and lower cost support its continued use—particularly in low- and middle-income countries. Limitations include the narrative (non-systematic) review design, which is susceptible to selection bias, and the lack of head-to-head cardiovascular outcome trials directly comparing dulaglutide to semaglutide or tirzepatide.

Diabetology international · Jun 2026DOI ↗