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Long-acting amylin-related peptides as therapies for obesity and type 2 diabetes.

Peptides · 2026

Last updated 2026-05-28

Pramlintide, the first amylin-based drug, helps control blood sugar and reduce weight by acting on the brain to reduce hunger and slow digestion. Newer long-acting amylin drugs, like CagriSema (a combination of amylin and GLP-1 drugs) and amycretin (a triple-action drug), have shown better results in trials than either drug alone. These newer drugs also cause side effects like nausea, which usually improve over time. Some studies suggest they may also help with liver disease, kidney issues, and high blood pressure.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalPeptides, 2026
Citations0
Molecules
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity

Abstract

The first therapeutically useful amylin receptor (AMYR) agonist, pramlintide was based upon the structure of non-aggregating rat amylin and found limited application as an adjunct to insulin therapy. It acts centrally to induce satiety, promote weight loss, suppress prandial glucagon release and reduce prandial hyperglycaemia. Recent understanding of the heterodimeric structure of amylin-calcitonin receptor complexes and of amylin structure-function properties has assisted the design of a second generation of non-aggregating, long-acting amylin analogues. These are now advancing in clinical development and promise to provide an effective additional resource for the management of obesity and type 2 diabetes. Amongst these agents is the dual AMYR/ calcitonin-receptor (CTR) agonist, cagrilintide that has also been co-formulated into a once weekly subcutaneous injection with the long-acting glucagon-like peptide-1receptor (GLP-1R) agonist, semaglutide (CagriSema). In clinical trials, CagriSema has achieved greater effects than either component alone. A unimolecular AMYR/CTR/GLP-1R multi-agonist peptide, amycretin has been developed for weekly injection and as a once-daily tablet. Several recently developed long-acting amylin analogues have shown strong efficacy as monotherapy in clinical trials: these include eloralintide, petrelintide, Met-233 and AZD6234. Other analogues with marked efficacy in preclinical studies, including non-peptide AMYR agonists are under development. Gastrointestinal side effects, especially nausea, similar to those reported for GLP-1R agonists are commonplace during initiation and up-titration of amylin analogues but mostly resolve during continued use. Evidence is emerging that long-acting AMYR agonists may show potential therapeutic benefits in treatment of patients with fatty liver disease, diabetes-associated kidney complications and resistant hypertension.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 41747885 ↗