Retatrutide: The Complete Guide

Key Facts

Generic name: Retatrutide (LY3437943)
Brand name: Not yet assigned (investigational)
Drug class: Triple GIP/GLP-1/glucagon receptor agonist
Used for: Obesity, type 2 diabetes (investigational)
Administration: Weekly subcutaneous injection
Common side effects: Nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, decreased appetite
Safety alerts: Investigational — not FDA-approved
Manufacturer: Eli Lilly and Company

Overview

At a Glance

Retatrutide (LY3437943) is a first-in-class triple hormone receptor agonist that simultaneously activates the GIP, GLP-1, and glucagon receptors. Developed by Eli Lilly, it is currently the most potent weight-loss agent in clinical development — the completed TRIUMPH-4 trial demonstrated up to 28.7% body weight reduction at 68 weeks, approaching results historically seen only with bariatric surgery. Retatrutide is not yet FDA-approved and remains in Phase 3 clinical trials (the TRIUMPH program). Unlike approved single-agonist (semaglutide) and dual-agonist (tirzepatide) drugs, retatrutide adds a third pathway — glucagon receptor activation — that increases energy expenditure, a mechanism no approved obesity medication currently exploits.

Retatrutide represents the next frontier in incretin-based pharmacotherapy. While semaglutide (Ozempic/Wegovy) targets a single receptor (GLP-1) and tirzepatide (Mounjaro/Zepbound) targets two (GIP + GLP-1), retatrutide activates all three major metabolic hormone receptors: GIP, GLP-1, and glucagon. This triple-agonist approach addresses both sides of the energy balance equation — decreasing caloric intake through appetite suppression and increasing caloric expenditure through glucagon-driven thermogenesis.

The molecule was developed by Eli Lilly and Company and is designated by its research code LY3437943. It has no brand name yet, as it remains investigational. The Phase 2 clinical data, published in The New England Journal of Medicine and The Lancet in 2023, generated considerable excitement: participants receiving the 12 mg dose lost an average of 24.2% of body weight over 48 weeks — and the weight-loss curve had not yet plateaued, suggesting further reductions with longer treatment (Jastreboff et al., NEJM 2023).

The Phase 3 TRIUMPH program, comprising four large clinical trials, is currently underway. The first results came from TRIUMPH-4, a trial in people with obesity and knee osteoarthritis, which reported in December 2025. Participants on the 12 mg dose lost an average of 28.7% of their body weight (71.2 lbs / 32.3 kg) over 68 weeks — the largest weight reduction ever reported for a pharmaceutical agent in a controlled clinical trial (Eli Lilly press release).

Beyond weight loss, Phase 2 data showed retatrutide produced dramatic reductions in liver fat (up to 82.4% at the 12 mg dose, with 86% of participants achieving normal liver fat levels), meaningful improvements in glycemic control in type 2 diabetes (HbA1c reductions up to -2.2%), and significant blood pressure reductions — suggesting broad cardiometabolic benefits (Nature Medicine, 2024).

Retatrutide's side-effect profile is consistent with the GLP-1 drug class: gastrointestinal symptoms (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea) are the most common adverse events, particularly during dose escalation. A notable signal is an increase in heart rate of approximately 5–10 bpm, which is higher than what has been observed with semaglutide (~3–4 bpm) and warrants monitoring in larger Phase 3 trials. Discontinuation rates due to adverse events in Phase 2 ranged from 6% to 16%.

If Phase 3 results confirm the Phase 2 findings, Eli Lilly is expected to file for FDA approval (NDA) in late 2026, with potential approval in mid-2027. Retatrutide would enter a rapidly evolving market alongside tirzepatide and other next-generation agents, but its weight-loss efficacy — substantially exceeding any approved medication — positions it as a potential paradigm shift in obesity treatment.

Quick Comparison: Single vs. Dual vs. Triple Agonist

FeatureSemaglutideTirzepatideRetatrutide
MechanismGLP-1 agonistGIP + GLP-1 agonistGIP + GLP-1 + glucagon agonist
Brand namesOzempic, WegovyMounjaro, ZepboundNot yet assigned
StatusFDA-approvedFDA-approvedInvestigational (Phase 3)
Max weight loss (trials)~14.9% (STEP 1)~22.5% (SURMOUNT-1)~28.7% (TRIUMPH-4)
Unique featureOral form available (Rybelsus)Dual incretin, flexible dosingIncreases energy expenditure via glucagon
ManufacturerNovo NordiskEli LillyEli Lilly

Sources: STEP 1 (NEJM), SURMOUNT-1 (NEJM), TRIUMPH-4 (Eli Lilly investor release).

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

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