Quick Comparison
| Danuglipron | MariTide | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | Approximately 6-9 hours, designed for twice-daily oral dosing | Approximately 21 days, supporting once-monthly dosing |
| Typical Dosage | Phase 2 trials: 40-200 mg oral twice daily, taken with food. Stepwise dose escalation over several weeks. Phase 3 development was halted in 2025; no approved dosing exists. | Phase 2 trials: 140-420 mg subcutaneous once monthly. Phase 3 MARITIME trials testing fixed-dose maintenance regimens after a stepwise escalation. Practical advantage of one injection every 4 weeks vs weekly for competitors. |
| Administration | Oral (tablet, twice daily, with food) — development discontinued | Subcutaneous injection (once monthly) |
| Research Papers | 5 papers | 5 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
Danuglipron
Danuglipron (PF-06882961) is a non-peptide small molecule GLP-1 receptor agonist designed for oral administration without the food and water restrictions that limit Rybelsus (oral semaglutide). As a small molecule rather than a peptide, it is not destroyed by gastric acid or proteolytic enzymes, allowing flexible oral dosing.
The molecule binds the GLP-1 receptor outside the orthosteric peptide-binding pocket, producing biased agonism that activates the same downstream G-protein signalling as native GLP-1 — glucose-dependent insulin secretion, glucagon suppression, slowed gastric emptying, and central appetite regulation through hypothalamic and brainstem GLP-1 receptors. The key engineering feature is its short pharmacokinetic profile, with a half-life around 6-9 hours, designed for twice-daily dosing rather than once-daily exposure to limit peak plasma concentrations and improve gastrointestinal tolerability.
In Phase 2 obesity and type 2 diabetes trials, danuglipron produced meaningful weight loss and HbA1c reductions, validating the small-molecule oral GLP-1 concept. However, gastrointestinal tolerability was problematic — over 70% of trial participants experienced nausea — and the program was ultimately discontinued by Pfizer in 2025 following a single case of suspected drug-induced liver injury in a healthy volunteer. Pfizer pivoted to alternative oral GLP-1 candidates with reduced hepatic exposure profiles. Danuglipron remains a high-search-volume topic because of its prominent failure and because it set early benchmarks for what oral small-molecule GLP-1 drugs (notably orforglipron from Eli Lilly) needed to beat to succeed.
MariTide
MariTide (maridebart cafraglutide) is a peptide-antibody conjugate combining a GLP-1 receptor agonist peptide with a GIP receptor antagonist antibody. This dual GLP-1 agonist + GIP antagonist mechanism is distinctive — most competing dual incretin drugs (tirzepatide, CT-388, VK2735) activate both receptors. The rationale for GIP antagonism is based on genetic and pharmacological evidence that loss-of-function in GIP signalling is associated with reduced obesity, suggesting that blocking rather than activating GIP may produce superior weight-loss outcomes.
The GLP-1 agonist component drives the established appetite-suppression and glycemic-control effects of the incretin pathway. The GIP receptor antagonist antibody simultaneously blocks GIP signalling at adipocytes and centrally, which preclinical data suggest enhances energy expenditure, reduces lipid storage, and amplifies the weight-loss effect of GLP-1 receptor activation. Whether GIP agonism (as in tirzepatide) or GIP antagonism (as in MariTide) is superior remains an open question that Phase 3 head-to-head data may eventually resolve.
The antibody-conjugated structure produces an exceptional pharmacokinetic profile, with a half-life of approximately three weeks. This supports once-monthly subcutaneous dosing — a unique practical advantage over the once-weekly schedules of all other late-stage obesity drugs. Phase 2 results showed roughly 20% body weight loss at 52 weeks. Animal studies have also suggested slower weight regain after discontinuation than seen with shorter-acting GLP-1 agonists, possibly due to the prolonged drug exposure during the washout period. Phase 3 MARITIME trials launched in 2026 will define the molecule's clinical positioning.
Risks & Safety
Danuglipron
Serious
a single case of potential drug-induced liver injury in a healthy volunteer led Pfizer to discontinue development in 2025 despite efficacy data.
Rare
standard GLP-1 class warnings (thyroid C-cell tumour signal, pancreatitis) plus the liver-injury signal that ended its development.
MariTide
Common
nausea, vomiting (notably high incidence at first dose, requiring careful titration), diarrhea, decreased appetite.
Serious
pancreatitis, gallstones, possible muscle loss.
Rare
thyroid C-cell tumour class warning, severe allergic reactions. Monthly dosing means side-effect peaks are concentrated around injection time — different tolerability profile from weekly drugs.
Full Profiles
Danuglipron →
Pfizer's once-failed attempt at an oral GLP-1 weight loss pill (code name PF-06882961). Despite producing meaningful weight loss in Phase 2 trials, Pfizer discontinued development in 2025 after reports of potential liver injury in a healthy volunteer. Included here because it remains heavily searched as the cautionary tale of the oral GLP-1 race — and because Pfizer is now developing alternative oral GLP-1 candidates after the danuglipron setback.
MariTide →
Amgen's monthly weight loss injection — and the only one in late-stage development you only have to take every four weeks rather than every week. Unusually, it activates GLP-1 but blocks GIP (most other dual drugs activate both). In Phase 2 it produced around 20% body weight loss at 52 weeks, with the added benefit of slow weight regain after stopping treatment in animal studies. Phase 3 MARITIME trials started in 2026. Generic name maridebart cafraglutide.