Cagrilintide Amylin Analogue
A long-acting amylin analogue studied in combination with semaglutide for enhanced weight loss.
Book Free ConsultationCall 310.299.4444What Cagrilintide actually is
Cagrilintide is a long-acting analogue of amylin — the pancreatic beta-cell co-secreted hormone that contributes to satiety, slows gastric emptying, and inhibits postprandial glucagon. The phase 2 program demonstrated additive weight loss when combined with semaglutide as CagriSema.1
REDEFINE trial readouts from Novo Nordisk’s CagriSema (cagrilintide + semaglutide) program show weight loss in the high teens to low twenties on combined therapy.2 At Luxbae we prescribe cagrilintide as an adjunct layer for patients plateauing on GLP-1 monotherapy.
At Luxbae, Cagrilintide is prescribed and supervised by Dr. Ernst von Schwarz, MD, PhD after a complimentary medical consultation.
Mechanism — Amylin receptor and calcitonin
Activates amylin receptors (AMY1, AMY3); slows gastric emptying, increases satiety, suppresses glucagon — complementary to GLP-1.3
What the research shows
Additive weight loss. Combined with semaglutide produces greater loss than either alone.1
Satiety enhancement. Amylin’s satiety pathway differs from GLP-1; patients report different fullness signal.
Glycemic effect. Postprandial glucagon suppression contributes to glycemic stability.
Side effects: GI symptoms (similar to GLP-1), nausea, occasional vomiting during titration, fatigue.
FDA note: Cagrilintide is not yet FDA-approved. CagriSema is in late-stage development (Novo Nordisk).
Cagrilintide FAQ
Is this approved?
Not yet — CagriSema is in late-stage trials. Compounded use is investigational.
Better than semaglutide alone?
Trial data shows additive effect when combined with semaglutide.
References
- Enebo LB, Berthelsen KK, Kankam M, et al. Safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of concomitant administration of multiple doses of cagrilintide with semaglutide 2.4 mg. Lancet. 2021;397(10286):1736-1748.
- Frias JP, Deenadayalan S, Erichsen L, et al. Efficacy and safety of co-administered once-weekly cagrilintide 2.4 mg with semaglutide. Lancet. 2023.
- Hay DL, Chen S, Lutz TA, et al. Amylin: Pharmacology, Physiology, and Clinical Potential. Pharmacol Rev. 2015;67(3):564-600.
