The Boston Globe

Weight loss drug results hopeful

- By Madison Muller

An experiment­al weight loss shot from Amgen Inc. — taken less frequently than wildly popular treatments from Eli Lilly & Co. and Novo Nordisk A/S — appears to keep weight off even after patients stop taking it.

Patients given a monthly injection of Amgen’s drug, dubbed MariTide, lost up to 14.5 percent of their body weight in just 12 weeks, according to a small, early-stage study published Monday in the journal Nature Metabolism. And some people kept the weight off for up to 150 days after stopping the drug, findings show.

“That is really a remarkable and distinguis­hing characteri­stic of this molecule,” Narimon Honarpour, senior vice president of global developmen­t at Amgen, said in an interview.

Investors and analysts have been eagerly awaiting updates on Amgen’s shot since the Thousand Oaks, Calif., company shared early results at a conference in 2022. The latest Nature Metabolism study offers the most detailed look yet at Amgen’s drug, which is now in midstage studies. Another readout is expected later this year.

Amgen’s drug works a bit differentl­y than Wegovy or Zepbound. It’s what’s known as an antibody-drug conjugate, or ADC, a type of molecule more commonly used as a targeted cancer treatment. One part of the drug, an antibody, blocks the GIP receptor, while the other part, two peptides, mimics a gut hormone called GLP-1.

“There’s something special about having them glued together the way they are on the same molecule,” said Saptarsi Haldar, vice president of cardiometa­bolic disorders at Amgen. The antibody component of the drug also allows it to stick around in the body longer than weekly weight loss shots.

Amgen designed the drug specifical­ly as a treatment for obesity, but is now testing it in patients with diabetes — the opposite of how weight loss drugs came to be at Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk.

The decision to inhibit GIP, rather than mimic it like Eli Lilly’s Zepbound, was based on insights gleaned from its expertise in human genetics.

Amgen’s study, which enrolled 110 patients with obesity, was intended to asses MariTide’s safety and tolerabili­ty, but it revealed the drug’s dramatic effects on weight. Patients in one group were randomly assigned to receive a single dose of MariTide and were followed for 150 days, while another group of patients were given a dose every four weeks for three months.

Safety and side effects were similar to other GLP-1 drugs, findings show. Nausea and vomiting were the most commonly reported side effects and typically lasted for about 72 hours.

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