Quick Comparison

SurvodutideVK2735
Half-Life144 hours (6 days)Approximately 144-168 hours (6-7 days), supporting once-weekly dosing
Typical DosageClinical trials: up to 6 mg subcutaneous once weekly. Dose escalation required over initial weeks starting at lower doses. Optimal dosing still being established in Phase 3.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.
AdministrationSubcutaneous injection (weekly)Subcutaneous injection (once weekly); oral tablet formulation in earlier development
Research Papers30 papers1 papers
Categories

Mechanism of Action

Survodutide

Survodutide activates both GLP-1 and glucagon receptors with a carefully calibrated ratio of agonist activity at each target. The GLP-1 receptor engagement provides the established metabolic benefits of the incretin pathway — centrally mediated appetite suppression, glucose-dependent insulinotropic effects, and delayed gastric emptying — creating a foundation of weight loss and glycemic improvement.

The glucagon receptor component is particularly relevant to survodutide's development focus on MASH (metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis). Glucagon receptor activation in hepatocytes upregulates mitochondrial beta-oxidation of fatty acids, increases ketone body production, and stimulates amino acid catabolism. This hepatic metabolic shift directly addresses the pathological fat accumulation that defines MASH, reducing intrahepatic triglyceride content by mobilizing stored lipids for energy production rather than continued storage.

Beyond the liver, glucagon signaling increases whole-body energy expenditure through multiple mechanisms: enhanced thermogenesis in brown adipose tissue, increased futile cycling in metabolic pathways, and elevated basal metabolic rate. In clinical trials for MASH, survodutide has demonstrated significant reductions in liver fat content alongside substantial body weight loss. The dual mechanism addresses both the upstream cause (excess caloric intake) and the downstream pathology (hepatic steatosis and inflammation) of metabolic liver disease simultaneously.

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

Survodutide

Common

nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, constipation, reduced appetite.

Serious

slightly elevated heart rate, changes in liver enzymes, inflammation of the pancreas, gallstones.

Rare

thyroid concerns (based on similar drugs in animals), severe allergic reactions.

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.

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