Eli Lilly announced Thursday that its investigational compound retatrutide successfully achieved the primary endpoint in its first late-stage diabetes study, demonstrating significant blood glucose control and weight reduction in Type 2 diabetes patients.
The study, conducted over 40 weeks, enrolled Type 2 diabetes patients controlling their condition solely through lifestyle modifications. Participants began the trial with baseline HbA1c measurements ranging between 7% and 9.5%.
Eli Lilly and Company, LLY
The experimental treatment demonstrated HbA1c reductions averaging between 1.7% and 2% across various dosing levels, substantially exceeding the 0.8% reduction observed in the placebo group. This outcome satisfied the study’s primary efficacy measure.
Regarding body weight changes, participants receiving the maximum dose experienced an average 16.8% reduction in body weight among those who completed treatment. When analyzing all enrolled participants—including those who discontinued therapy—the average weight loss measured 15.3%.
By comparison, Lilly’s currently marketed medication Zepbound produced weight reductions ranging from 11% to 13.1% in similar 40-week diabetes trials. While retatrutide demonstrates superior weight loss performance, direct comparative studies have not been conducted.
Analysts from J.P. Morgan provided a more cautious assessment, pointing out that the drug’s efficacy gains must be weighed against elevated adverse event frequencies compared to Lilly’s diabetes medication Mounjaro.
Retatrutide functions as a weekly injectable therapy that stimulates three distinct hormone receptors—GLP-1, GIP, and glucagon—which has led to its informal designation as a “triple-G” agent. This represents one additional receptor compared to Zepbound (tirzepatide), which engages GLP-1 and GIP, and two more than Novo Nordisk‘s Wegovy (semaglutide), which activates only GLP-1.
The therapeutic strategy involves simultaneously targeting these three biological pathways to reduce appetite, regulate glucose metabolism, and enhance metabolic energy expenditure.
Adverse reactions were predominantly gastrointestinal in nature. Approximately 26.5% of participants receiving the highest dose reported nausea, 22.8% experienced diarrhea, and 17.6% had vomiting episodes. Treatment discontinuation due to adverse effects occurred in up to 5% of patients, which Lilly characterized as comparatively modest.
A limited number of participants developed dysesthesia—an abnormal nerve-related sensation.
Lilly has not submitted regulatory applications for retatrutide in either obesity or diabetes indications. Thursday’s announcement represents only the second Phase 3 dataset released for this compound.
The pharmaceutical company anticipates reporting outcomes from seven more Phase 3 clinical trials throughout 2025, examining diverse patient populations.
Lilly is simultaneously preparing to introduce its oral obesity medication orforglipron during the second quarter of this year, subject to FDA clearance.
Meanwhile, Novo Nordisk is pursuing competitive advances. In March 2025, Novo secured licensing rights to a triple-receptor compound from United Laboratories International for up to $2 billion—though this candidate remains in early-stage development with several years required before potential market availability.
Shares of Eli Lilly (LLY) traded modestly lower in premarket activity Thursday following the clinical data release.
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