Quick Comparison
| Mazdutide | VK2735 | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | 144-192 hours (6-8 days) | Approximately 144-168 hours (6-7 days), supporting once-weekly dosing |
| Typical Dosage | Approved (China): 6-9 mg subcutaneous once weekly. Dose escalation over initial weeks starting at lower doses. Clinical trial doses ranged from 3-9 mg subcutaneous once weekly. | Phase 2 (subcutaneous): doses of 2.5, 5, 10, and 15 mg once weekly with stepwise escalation. The 15 mg arm produced the maximum weight loss of 14.7% at 13 weeks. Oral formulation in Phase 1: 30-100 mg daily, dose escalation ongoing. |
| Administration | Subcutaneous injection (weekly) | Subcutaneous injection (once weekly); oral tablet formulation in earlier development |
| Research Papers | 27 papers | 1 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
Mazdutide
Mazdutide is a dual-receptor agonist that activates both GLP-1 and glucagon receptors, combining appetite suppression with increased energy expenditure. The GLP-1 component functions similarly to other GLP-1 agonists — binding to receptors in the hypothalamus to reduce hunger, stimulating glucose-dependent insulin secretion from pancreatic beta cells, and slowing gastric motility to prolong post-meal satiety.
The glucagon receptor component distinguishes mazdutide from pure GLP-1 agonists. Glucagon binding in the liver activates adenylyl cyclase, increasing cAMP and activating protein kinase A, which phosphorylates key enzymes in fatty acid oxidation and ketogenesis. This drives the liver to burn stored fat as fuel rather than accumulate it — a mechanism with direct therapeutic relevance for patients with metabolic-associated fatty liver disease (MAFLD). In adipose tissue, glucagon signaling promotes lipolysis and may activate thermogenic programs in brown and beige fat cells.
The engineering challenge in dual GLP-1/glucagon agonists is balancing the hyperglycemic effect of glucagon against the glucose-lowering effects of GLP-1. Mazdutide achieves this by tuning the relative receptor affinities so that GLP-1-mediated insulin secretion offsets glucagon-driven glucose production, resulting in net glycemic improvement alongside enhanced fat oxidation and energy expenditure.
VK2735
VK2735 is a once-weekly subcutaneous dual GLP-1/GIP receptor agonist with a structure optimised for high potency and a clean tolerability profile. Dual incretin receptor activation produces complementary effects on appetite, glucose handling, and energy expenditure: GLP-1 receptor agonism delivers central appetite suppression through hypothalamic arcuate-nucleus signalling, slows gastric emptying, and triggers glucose-dependent insulin secretion, while GIP receptor activation amplifies the insulin response, supports beta-cell function, and modulates adipose tissue lipid handling.
The molecule's pharmacokinetic profile delivers sustained receptor exposure across a one-week dosing interval, achieved through structural modifications that enable albumin binding and resistance to proteolytic degradation. In the Phase 2 VENTURE trial, the 15 mg dose produced 14.7% mean body weight loss at 13 weeks — the fastest early weight loss observed for any obesity drug, with the loss curve still descending steeply at trial end. This rapid trajectory suggests substantially greater total weight loss would be achievable with longer dosing, and Phase 3 VANQUISH trials launched in 2026 are testing 68-week treatment durations to characterise the full magnitude of effect.
Viking is also developing an oral tablet formulation of VK2735 in parallel, which entered Phase 1 in 2024-2025. If both formulations succeed, Viking would have one of the most flexible GLP-1/GIP product profiles on the market — though as a small biotech company it faces significant manufacturing and commercial scaling challenges relative to Lilly and Novo Nordisk.
Risks & Safety
Mazdutide
Common
nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, reduced appetite, injection site reactions.
Serious
elevated liver enzymes, inflammation of the pancreas, gallstones.
Rare
thyroid concerns (seen with similar drugs in animals), severe liver damage.
VK2735
Common
nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation, decreased appetite, injection site reactions. Discontinuation rates in Phase 2 were broadly similar to other GLP-1/GIP dual agonists.
Serious
pancreatitis, gallstones, possible muscle mass loss.
Rare
thyroid C-cell tumour class warning, severe allergic reactions. Long-term safety being established in Phase 3.
Full Profiles
Mazdutide →
A weight loss injection that suppresses appetite while also boosting your metabolism and helping your liver burn fat. Approved in China for obesity in 2024, with up to 14% body weight loss in trials. It targets two hormones — GLP-1 (which reduces hunger) and glucagon (which increases calorie burning and liver fat breakdown). Particularly promising for people with fatty liver disease alongside obesity.
VK2735 →
Viking Therapeutics' once-weekly weight loss injection that, like tirzepatide, hits both the GLP-1 and GIP receptors. In a 13-week Phase 2 trial it produced 14.7% mean body weight loss — the steepest early loss curve recorded for any obesity drug — and Phase 3 VANQUISH trials began in 2026. An oral tablet version is also in earlier development. Viking is one of the only small biotech companies competing directly with Lilly and Novo Nordisk in the GLP-1 space.