Amylin analogs for the treatment of obesity without diabetes: present and future.
Expert Rev Clin Pharmacol · 2024
Last updated 2026-05-28Amylin analogs like pramlintide and cagrilintide are being studied as treatments for obesity in people without diabetes. In clinical trials, pramlintide helped participants lose over 3% of their body weight, while cagrilintide led to weight loss of more than 10% in early studies, though it caused more nausea. Cagrilintide has also shown effectiveness compared to GLP-1 drugs. Future research may explore combining these drugs with others for greater weight-loss effects.
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| Journal | Expert Rev Clin Pharmacol, 2024 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 6 |
| Relative citation ratio | 1.21 |
| NIH percentile | 57 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Obesity |
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Obesity is a pandemic, linked with increased morbidity including diabetes mellitus (DM) and certain cancer types. Amylin is a major regulatory hormone for satiation and food intake perception in humans. Amylin analogs (pramlintide and cagrilintide) are emerging as promising anti-obesity agents in non-DM subjects.
AREAS COVERED: Pramlintide, the first amylin analog, initially used for the treatment of both type 1 and type 2 DM, has demonstrated weight-lowering action. Clinical trials confirmed a weight loss exceeding 3% in the study period without major untoward effects, which was maintained beyond the follow-up period. Recently, cagrilintide, a long-lasting synthetic amylin analog has been introduced. Cagrilintide has achieved adequate weight loss, reaching even more than 10% of the total weight in early clinical trials. However, adverse gastrointestinal effects, particularly nausea, were more frequent compared with pramlintide. Clinical trials have also confirmed the effectiveness of cagrilintide in comparison with glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonists.
EXPERT OPINION: Amylin analogs will certainly enrich the growing therapeutic armamentarium aimed at tackling obesity. The most exciting future research venue could be the development of their combinations with other weight-lowering drugs, especially dual and triple incretin-based co-agonists, thus potentially providing massive weight-loss effects.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 39317404 ↗