CagriSema (Cagrilintide + Semaglutide): The Complete Guide

Key Facts

Full name: CagriSema (cagrilintide 2.4 mg + semaglutide 2.4 mg)
Class: Fixed-ratio combination — long-acting amylin analog + GLP-1 receptor agonist
Route: Once-weekly subcutaneous injection
Developer: Novo Nordisk
Studied for: Obesity, type 2 diabetes, weight management
Status: Phase 3 (REDEFINE program); FDA filing expected 2025–2026
Key result: Up to 15.6% weight loss at 32 weeks in Phase 2 (vs. 5.1% semaglutide alone)
Notable: Dual amylin + GLP-1 mechanism; potential best-in-class weight loss among injectable therapies

Overview

At a Glance

CagriSema is a once-weekly subcutaneous injection combining two active molecules in a single pen: cagrilintide, a long-acting amylin receptor agonist, and semaglutide 2.4 mg, a GLP-1 receptor agonist already approved as Wegovy for chronic weight management. Developed by Novo Nordisk, CagriSema exploits complementary mechanisms — amylin-driven gastric slowing and brainstem satiety signaling layered on top of GLP-1-mediated appetite suppression and glucose control — to achieve weight loss that appears to exceed either component alone. In Phase 2 trials, CagriSema produced up to 15.6% body weight loss at 32 weeks, roughly triple the 5.1% seen with semaglutide 2.4 mg monotherapy. The compound is now in Phase 3 trials under the REDEFINE clinical program, with FDA submission anticipated in 2025–2026. CagriSema has not yet been approved by any regulatory agency.

The obesity pharmacotherapy landscape has shifted dramatically since the approval of semaglutide (Wegovy) in 2021 and tirzepatide (Zepbound) in 2023. Both drugs demonstrated that sustained, clinically meaningful weight loss — on the order of 15–22% of body weight — was achievable with once-weekly injections. Yet even these results leave a gap: many patients do not reach target weight, and the search for agents that can push weight loss further while maintaining tolerability remains a central goal of metabolic drug development (Wilding et al., 2022).

CagriSema represents Novo Nordisk's next-generation approach to this problem. Rather than adding a third receptor target (as retatrutide does with GLP-1/GIP/glucagon triple agonism), CagriSema pairs the well-established GLP-1 pathway with the amylin system — a physiological satiety pathway that has been underexploited in obesity treatment. Amylin is a 37-amino-acid peptide hormone co-secreted with insulin from pancreatic beta cells after meals. It slows gastric emptying, suppresses postprandial glucagon secretion, and promotes satiety via direct action on the area postrema and nucleus of the solitary tract in the brainstem (Lutz, 2005).

The amylin analog pramlintide (Symlin) was approved in 2005 as an adjunct to insulin therapy in diabetes, but its clinical impact was limited by the need for multiple daily injections and modest efficacy. Cagrilintide overcomes these limitations through structural modifications that extend its half-life to approximately 7 days, enabling once-weekly dosing and achieving substantially higher receptor engagement than pramlintide (Enebo et al., 2021).

By combining cagrilintide and semaglutide in a fixed-ratio formulation, CagriSema creates a dual-pathway assault on the neurobiology of energy balance. Preclinical and early clinical data suggest the two mechanisms are genuinely additive — and possibly synergistic — in reducing food intake and body weight. The Phase 2 results published in The Lancet showed that CagriSema at the highest doses produced 15.6% weight loss at 32 weeks, significantly more than either semaglutide 2.4 mg (5.1%) or cagrilintide 2.4 mg (8.1%) alone (Enebo et al., 2021).

The REDEFINE Phase 3 program includes multiple trials evaluating CagriSema in populations with obesity (with and without type 2 diabetes), comparing it to semaglutide 2.4 mg and placebo. Top-line results from REDEFINE 1 reported approximately 22.7% weight loss at 68 weeks, positioning CagriSema competitively with tirzepatide and potentially ahead of semaglutide alone (Novo Nordisk, 2024).

Quick Facts

PropertyDetails
Active componentsCagrilintide (long-acting amylin analog) + semaglutide (GLP-1 RA)
FormulationFixed-ratio combination in a single prefilled pen
Target receptorsAmylin receptor (AMY1, AMY3) + GLP-1 receptor
AdministrationOnce-weekly subcutaneous injection
Target doseCagrilintide 2.4 mg + semaglutide 2.4 mg
Half-life (cagrilintide)~160 hours (~7 days)
Half-life (semaglutide)~165 hours (~7 days)
Phase 3 programREDEFINE (multiple trials)
Regulatory statusInvestigational (not yet approved)
DeveloperNovo Nordisk A/S

CagriSema vs. Other Obesity Therapies

PropertyCagriSemaSemaglutide 2.4 mg (Wegovy)Tirzepatide (Zepbound)RetatrutideSurvodutide
MechanismAmylin + GLP-1GLP-1 aloneGLP-1 + GIPGLP-1 + GIP + GlucagonGLP-1 + Glucagon
Dosing frequencyOnce weeklyOnce weeklyOnce weeklyOnce weeklyOnce weekly
Peak weight loss~22.7% (68 wk, Phase 3)~16.9% (68 wk)~22.5% (72 wk)~24.2% (48 wk, Phase 2)~18.7% (46 wk, Phase 2)
Glycemic benefitYes (dual mechanism)YesYesYesYes
Approval statusPhase 3FDA-approved (2021)FDA-approved (2023)Phase 3Phase 3
DeveloperNovo NordiskNovo NordiskEli LillyEli LillyBoehringer Ingelheim

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider.

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