New clinical evidence demonstrates that combining SGLT2 inhibitors with GLP-1 receptor agonists provides additive benefits for type 2 diabetes patients, while machine learning tools help personalize therapy selection.
Veru Inc. has enrolled the first patient in its Phase 2b PLATEAU clinical trial evaluating enobosarm combined with semaglutide for weight loss in older patients with obesity. The study will assess enobosarm's ability to preserve lean mass and physical function while augmenting fat loss.
New research reveals GLP-1 receptor agonists reduce substance use disorders by 14%, lower Parkinson's disease risk after 5-10 years of use, and cut endometrial cancer risk by 66% when combined with progestin therapy.
A systematic review of 64 randomized clinical trials found GLP-1 receptor agonists produce greater weight loss in women than men, while the global market is projected to grow from $51.57 billion in 2026 to $112.62 billion by 2032.
Semaglutide and tirzepatide represent distinct GLP-1-based weight management medications with different mechanisms of action. Clinical trials show varying weight loss outcomes, while new combination therapies undergo head-to-head testing.
CagriSema demonstrated 23% weight loss in the REDEFINE 4 trial but failed to meet its primary endpoint of non-inferiority compared to tirzepatide's 25.5% weight loss. The company submitted an FDA application in December 2025 based on earlier pivotal trials.
The European Commission has approved a new 7.2 mg once-weekly maintenance dose of Wegovy (semaglutide injection) for adults with obesity, providing physicians with an additional treatment option for patients requiring further weight reduction after the 2.4 mg dose.
GLP-1 weight loss drugs show increasing efficacy but raise concerns about excessive weight loss, side effects, and the rise of unregulated compounded versions sold online.
The European Commission has authorized a new 7.2 mg once-weekly dose of Wegovy (semaglutide) for adults with obesity across all 27 EU member states, following positive opinion from the EMA's scientific committee in December 2025.
Real-world study finds SGLT2 inhibitors reduce chronic kidney disease and acute kidney injury risk more effectively than GLP-1 receptor agonists in patients with type 2 diabetes, with greatest benefits in those without preexisting kidney disease.