A Study Looking at How Weekly Injections of Two Hormones - GIP and Amylin - Affect Stomach-related Side Effects in People Who Are Overweight or Obese
NCT07411560 · Recruiting
Last updated 2026-05-28This clinical trial is testing how weekly injections of two hormones, GIP and amylin, affect stomach-related side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea in adults who are overweight or obese.
What this study is testing ClinicalTrials.gov NCT07411560 ↗
Description as written by the study sponsor.
This trial is being done to look at the safety and effect of combining cagrilintide and NNC0480-0389 in people living with overweight and obesity compared to taking cagrilintide alone. In one period participants will get two medicines: cagrilintide and NNC0480-0389. In the other period, participants will get cagrilintide together with a placebo version of NNC0480-0389.The placebo looks like the real treatment but does not have any active medicine in it. Cagrilintide and NNC0480-0389 is a new medicine being tested to help people with type 2 diabetes and/or overweight or obesity. The trial medicines is not yet approved for use outside of clinical trials. Participants will receive the trial medicines the way the trial doctor has described. The study will last for about 4.5 months.
Treatments tested
- Glucose-dependent Insulinotropic Polypeptide (GIP) Drug
Participants will receive GIP subcutaneously.
- Cagrilintide Drug
Participants will receive Cagrilintide subcutaneously.
- Placebo GIP Drug
Participants will receive placebo matched to GIP subcutaneously.
| Main thing measured | Number of Treatment Emergent Adverse Events (TEAEs) nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea |
|---|---|
| Sponsor | Novo Nordisk A/S |
| Conditions studied | Overweight, Obese |
| GLP-1 drugs | — |
Full protocol, eligibility, and contacts on ClinicalTrials.gov NCT07411560 ↗