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Cagrilintide is not associated with clinically relevant QTc prolongation: A thorough QT study in healthy participants.

Diabetes Obes Metab · 2024

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 105 healthy participants, those given a 4.5 mg weekly dose of cagrilintide did not show any concerning changes in heart rhythm timing compared to placebo. The results met safety criteria, as the upper limits of the confidence intervals for heart rhythm changes stayed below 10 milliseconds at all measured times. The study also confirmed the test could detect real effects by using moxifloxacin as a positive control.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDiabetes Obes Metab, 2024
Citations2
Relative citation ratio0.41
NIH percentile25
Molecules cagrilintide

Abstract

AIMS: The combination of cagrilintide and semaglutide (CagriSema) is being developed for the treatment of obesity and type 2 diabetes. The objective of this thorough QT study was to confirm that cagrilintide does not result in a clinically relevant prolongation in cardiac repolarization compared with placebo. MATERIALS AND METHODS: This was a double-blind study (NCT05804162) in which healthy participants were randomized to cagrilintide, administered as a once-weekly subcutaneous injection dose escalated to 4.5 mg, or a placebo. The primary end point was the time-matched change from baseline in Fridericia heart rate-corrected QT interval (QTcF) at 12-, 24-, 48- and 72 h after the last cagrilintide 4.5-mg dose. To conclude that cagrilintide does not induce a clinically relevant prolongation, the upper limit of the two-sided 90% confidence interval (CI) for the treatment difference at each of the four time points must fall below 10 ms. To establish QT assay sensitivity, participants in the placebo arms received a single 400-mg oral moxifloxacin dose as a positive control and moxifloxacin placebo in a nested cross-over fashion. RESULTS: A total of 105 participants received cagrilintide (n = 53) or placebo (n = 52). No clinically relevant QTcF prolongation occurred after the last cagrilintide 4.5-mg dose; the upper limits of the two-sided 90% CIs of the placebo-adjusted QTcF changes from baseline were below 10 ms at all time points. QT assay sensitivity was demonstrated with moxifloxacin as a positive control. CONCLUSIONS: Cagrilintide did not result in clinically relevant QTcF prolongation, indicating no increased risk of ventricular tachyarrhythmias.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 39279639 ↗

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