Quick Comparison
| Cagrilintide | Orforglipron | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | 168 hours (7 days) | Approximately 29-49 hours, supporting once-daily oral dosing |
| Typical Dosage | Clinical trials: 1.2-4.5 mg subcutaneous once weekly with dose escalation. Combination (CagriSema): 2.4 mg cagrilintide + 2.4 mg semaglutide subcutaneous once weekly. | Phase 3 trials: 3 mg oral once daily as the starting dose, escalated every 4 weeks to maintenance doses of 12, 24, or 36 mg once daily. Can be taken at any time of day, with or without food and water — a significant practical advantage over Rybelsus. |
| Administration | Subcutaneous injection (weekly) | Oral (tablet, once daily, no food or water restrictions) |
| Research Papers | 30 papers | 5 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
Cagrilintide
Cagrilintide is a long-acting analogue of amylin, a 37-amino-acid peptide hormone naturally co-secreted with insulin from pancreatic beta cells after meals. Native amylin plays a crucial but often overlooked role in metabolic regulation — it signals satiety, slows gastric emptying, and suppresses post-meal glucagon secretion through mechanisms entirely distinct from the GLP-1 pathway.
Cagrilintide activates amylin receptors, which are heterodimeric complexes formed by the calcitonin receptor (CTR) paired with receptor activity-modifying proteins (RAMP1, RAMP2, or RAMP3). These receptors are concentrated in the area postrema and the nucleus tractus solitarius in the brainstem — regions outside the blood-brain barrier that can directly sense circulating peptides. Activation of these neurons triggers ascending satiety signals to the hypothalamus, reducing meal size and food-seeking behavior through pathways that are neuroanatomically separate from GLP-1 signaling.
This distinct mechanism is why cagrilintide produces additive appetite suppression when combined with semaglutide (as CagriSema) — the two peptides target different populations of neurons within the brain's appetite control circuitry. Cagrilintide has been engineered with acylation modifications that enable albumin binding, extending its half-life from minutes (native amylin) to approximately one week, making it suitable for weekly subcutaneous dosing.
Orforglipron
Orforglipron is a non-peptide small molecule that activates the GLP-1 receptor through binding outside the orthosteric peptide-binding pocket — a true biased GLP-1 receptor agonist rather than a structural mimic of native GLP-1. Because it is a small molecule rather than a peptide, it is not destroyed by gastric acid or proteolytic enzymes in the gut, which is why it can be taken orally without the strict fasting and water-restriction requirements that limit semaglutide's oral formulation (Rybelsus).
Receptor activation triggers the same downstream signalling cascades as injectable GLP-1 agonists: stimulation of glucose-dependent insulin secretion from pancreatic beta cells, suppression of glucagon release from alpha cells, slowing of gastric emptying, and central appetite suppression through hypothalamic and brainstem GLP-1 receptors. Importantly, orforglipron's biased agonism profile favours G-protein signalling over beta-arrestin recruitment, which preclinical data suggests may reduce receptor desensitisation over chronic dosing.
The pharmacokinetic profile gives it a half-life of roughly 29-49 hours, comfortably supporting once-daily oral dosing with stable plasma concentrations. In Phase 2 obesity trials, orforglipron produced approximately 14.7% mean body weight reduction at 36 weeks at the highest dose tested. Phase 3 results in 2026 (ACHIEVE-1 for type 2 diabetes, ATTAIN-1 and ATTAIN-2 for obesity) have positioned it as the leading candidate to be the first true oral GLP-1 with weight-loss efficacy approaching that of weekly injectables, removing one of the main barriers to GLP-1 therapy adoption.
Risks & Safety
Cagrilintide
Common
nausea (20-30%), vomiting, diarrhea, injection site reactions, reduced appetite.
Serious
possible pancreas inflammation, low blood sugar if combined with insulin or diabetes medications, limited long-term safety data.
Rare
severe allergic reactions.
Orforglipron
Common
nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, dyspepsia. Side-effect frequency in Phase 3 has been comparable to injectable GLP-1 agonists.
Serious
pancreatitis, gallstones, dehydration.
Rare
thyroid C-cell tumour signal as a class warning, severe allergic reactions. Long-term safety still being characterised.
Full Profiles
Cagrilintide →
A long-acting version of amylin, a natural hormone your body releases after eating that tells your brain you're full. It works through a completely different pathway than GLP-1 drugs like semaglutide, which is why combining them (as CagriSema) produces even better results. On its own, it reduces how much you eat per meal by signalling fullness earlier. Developed by Novo Nordisk, mainly as part of the CagriSema combination.
Orforglipron →
The first weight loss drug in the GLP-1 class that comes as a daily pill rather than a weekly injection — and unlike Rybelsus, you can take it with food and water. Made by Eli Lilly, it is technically a small molecule rather than a peptide, but it activates the same GLP-1 receptor as semaglutide and tirzepatide. Phase 3 trials in 2026 (ACHIEVE-1 in diabetes, ATTAIN-1 and ATTAIN-2 in obesity) have shown around 14-15% body weight loss. Likely to be the first oral GLP-1 to compete on weight loss with the injectables.