PMID-37351564 – Orforglipron Phase 2 Obesity Trial

PMID-37351564 – Orforglipron Phase 2 Obesity Trial

Wharton S, Blevins T, Connery L, et al. Daily Oral GLP-1 Receptor Agonist Orforglipron for Adults with Obesity. N Engl J Med. 2023;389(10):877-888.

Quick Reference

Property Value
PMID 37351564
DOI 10.1056/NEJMoa2302392
Year 2023
Journal New England Journal of Medicine
Study Type RCT (Phase 2)
Evidence Level II
Sample n=272 adults with obesity or overweight with comorbidity (no diabetes)
Peptide(s) Studied Orforglipron

Key Findings

  • At week 36, mean body weight change ranged from -9.4% to -14.7% across orforglipron dose groups vs. -2.3% with placebo
  • At week 26, mean change from baseline ranged from -8.6% to -12.6% vs. -2.0% (placebo)
  • The 36 mg and 45 mg doses achieved the greatest weight loss (~14.7%)
  • Mean baseline body weight was 108.7 kg (BMI 37.9)
  • 46-75% of orforglipron-treated participants achieved >=10% weight loss
  • GI adverse events (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea) were the most common, occurring in a dose-dependent pattern
  • Most GI events were mild-to-moderate and occurred during dose escalation
  • No cases of pancreatitis; no medullary thyroid carcinoma signals

Study Design

Phase 2, randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial. Adults with BMI >=30 (or >=27 with weight-related comorbidity) without diabetes were randomized to orforglipron at 12, 24, 36, or 45 mg once daily orally, or placebo for 36 weeks. Dose escalation occurred over the first 12-29 days depending on the dose group. Primary endpoint was percent change in body weight from baseline.

Limitations

  • Phase 2 trial with modest sample size (n=272)
  • 36-week duration is relatively short for chronic weight management
  • No active comparator arm (no head-to-head vs. semaglutide or tirzepatide)
  • GI tolerability may limit real-world adherence
  • All participants were non-diabetic; efficacy in T2D assessed in a separate trial

Clinical Relevance

This landmark NEJM publication demonstrated that a non-peptide, oral, small-molecule GLP-1 RA can achieve weight loss comparable to injectable GLP-1 RAs (~15% at 36 weeks). This is paradigm-shifting for the field: if oral agents can match injectable efficacy, the barrier to entry for obesity pharmacotherapy drops dramatically. For peptide therapy practitioners, orforglipron represents a competitive threat to injectable peptides but also validates the GLP-1 pathway for weight management. Understanding orforglipron helps practitioners contextualize why patients may seek oral alternatives. NOTE: Orforglipron is NOT a peptide — it is a small molecule that activates the same GLP-1 receptor.

Related

#research #RCT #evidence-level-II #metabolic #orforglipron #investigational #oral