Quick Comparison
| NN1706 | Tesamorelin | |
|---|---|---|
| Half-Life | Approximately 14-18 hours, supporting once-daily dosing | 26-38 minutes |
| Typical Dosage | Phase 1 trials: stepwise dose escalation from low microgram doses up to multiple milligrams subcutaneous once daily. Optimal dosing for Phase 2/3 still being established. Daily dosing allows tighter dose adjustment than weekly drugs, at the cost of injection burden. | FDA-approved: 2 mg subcutaneous once daily in the abdomen. Off-label protocols may vary. Injection site should be rotated within the abdominal area. |
| Administration | Subcutaneous injection (once daily) | Subcutaneous injection (daily, abdominal) |
| Research Papers | 1 papers | 17 papers |
| Categories |
Mechanism of Action
NN1706
NN1706 is a once-daily GLP-1/GIP/glucagon triple receptor agonist — Novo Nordisk's mechanistic equivalent to Eli Lilly's retatrutide, designed to activate all three pathways simultaneously in a single molecule. Each receptor contributes complementary metabolic effects: GLP-1 agonism centrally suppresses appetite, slows gastric emptying, and stimulates glucose-dependent insulin secretion; GIP agonism augments insulin response and modulates adipose lipid handling; and glucagon receptor agonism in the liver drives fatty acid oxidation, ketogenesis, and hepatic glucose output, while in brown and beige adipose tissue it promotes thermogenesis and increases whole-body energy expenditure.
The key engineering challenge in any glucagon-containing multi-agonist is balancing glucagon's hyperglycemic tendency against the glucose-lowering effect of GLP-1 and GIP. NN1706's receptor potency ratios are tuned so that incretin-driven insulinotropic effects sufficiently offset glucagon-driven glucose production, producing net glycemic improvement alongside enhanced fat oxidation. The glucagon component is what differentiates triple agonists like NN1706 and retatrutide from dual GLP-1/GIP agonists like tirzepatide — the additional energy-expenditure and hepatic-fat-mobilising effects of glucagon are the main reason triple agonists have produced higher weight-loss numbers in early trials.
The pharmacokinetic profile gives NN1706 a half-life of roughly 14-18 hours, matched to once-daily subcutaneous dosing rather than the once-weekly schedule of retatrutide. The trade-off is more injections per week against tighter dose control, smoother plasma concentrations, and faster ability to adjust or pause dosing if side effects emerge. The first human data published in 2026 from Phase 1 trials in rodents, monkeys, and humans showed meaningful weight loss with an acceptable initial tolerability profile, setting up Phase 2 obesity and type 2 diabetes trials.
Tesamorelin
Tesamorelin is a synthetic GHRH analogue consisting of all 44 amino acids of human GHRH with a trans-3-hexenoic acid group attached to the tyrosine at position 1. This lipophilic modification enhances receptor binding affinity and provides modest resistance to dipeptidyl peptidase-IV (DPP-IV) cleavage, improving its pharmacokinetic profile compared to native GHRH.
Like other GHRH analogues, tesamorelin activates the GHRH receptor on pituitary somatotrophs via the Gs/cAMP/PKA pathway, stimulating endogenous GH synthesis and pulsatile secretion. The resulting increase in circulating GH and IGF-1 produces its primary therapeutic effect: targeted reduction of visceral adipose tissue (VAT). GH-mediated lipolysis is particularly active in visceral fat depots because these adipocytes have the highest density of GH receptors and are most responsive to GH-stimulated hormone-sensitive lipase activation.
The specificity of tesamorelin's effect on visceral rather than subcutaneous fat has been well-documented in clinical trials. Visceral adipose tissue is metabolically distinct — it drains directly into the portal circulation and contributes disproportionately to hepatic insulin resistance, inflammatory cytokine production, and cardiovascular risk. By selectively reducing this depot, tesamorelin improves the cardiometabolic profile beyond what would be expected from total fat loss alone. Clinical trials also showed improvements in hepatic steatosis (fatty liver) markers, triglyceride levels, and trunk fat distribution. It remains the only GHRH analogue with active FDA approval, specifically for HIV-associated lipodystrophy, where visceral fat accumulation is a common and distressing side effect of antiretroviral therapy.
Risks & Safety
NN1706
Common
nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, decreased appetite (similar to other GLP-1 class drugs). Daily dosing produces more even side-effect profile vs weekly peaks but requires daily injections.
Serious
pancreatitis, gallstones, slightly elevated heart rate (signal seen with other glucagon-receptor-active drugs).
Rare
thyroid C-cell tumour class warning, severe allergic reactions. Limited human safety data so far.
Tesamorelin
Common
injection site redness, itching, and pain, joint pain, swelling in hands/feet, muscle pain, tingling.
Serious
reduced insulin sensitivity and raised blood sugar, potential to accelerate existing tumour growth.
Rare
severe allergic reactions, wrist pain/numbness (carpal tunnel). Not suitable for people with active cancer or during pregnancy.
Full Profiles
NN1706 →
Novo Nordisk's answer to retatrutide — a once-daily injection that activates all three of the major appetite and metabolism hormones (GLP-1, GIP, and glucagon). The first human data was published in 2026, showing meaningful weight loss in obese subjects and confirming the daily-dosing mechanism is tolerable. Direct competitor to Lilly's once-weekly retatrutide, with the trade-off of more frequent dosing in exchange for potentially smoother side-effect control and easier dose adjustment.
Tesamorelin →
The only growth hormone peptide with active FDA approval — sold as Egrifta for reducing dangerous belly fat (visceral fat) in HIV patients. It's especially effective at targeting the deep fat around your organs, which is the most harmful type. Widely used off-label by people wanting to improve body composition, reduce belly fat, and address fatty liver. In trials it reduced trunk fat by 15-18%.