Retatrutide
What it is
Retatrutide is the most advanced GLP-1-class weight-loss compound currently in development — an Eli Lilly investigational drug in late-stage clinical trials. It's a triple agonist, meaning it activates three different metabolic receptors at once: GLP-1, GIP, and glucagon. That third receptor (glucagon) is what makes it different from Ozempic (semaglutide, GLP-1 only) and Mounjaro (tirzepatide, GLP-1 + GIP).
How it works
Each of the three receptors does something useful:
- GLP-1 receptor — suppresses appetite, slows stomach emptying, improves insulin sensitivity. (What Ozempic does.)
- GIP receptor — further improves insulin response, may enhance fat oxidation, reduces some GLP-1 nausea.
- Glucagon receptor — increases resting energy expenditure (you burn more calories doing nothing) and pulls fat out of the liver.
The glucagon arm is what gives Retatrutide its outlier weight-loss numbers — you're not just eating less, you're also burning more.
Benefits
- Largest weight loss of any pharmaceutical agent ever tested in trials — ~24% body weight reduction at 48 weeks (12 mg dose)
- Reverses fatty liver disease (NAFLD/MAFLD) — ~80% relative reduction in liver fat
- Reduces visceral fat aggressively
- Improves cardiovascular markers (BP, lipids, A1c)
- Potential indication for sleep apnea, knee osteoarthritis, and metabolic disease in trials
Timeline
- Week 1–2
- Significant appetite suppression. Often nausea during initial titration.
- Week 4–8
- 5–8% body weight loss typically. Energy expenditure starts increasing (the glucagon effect).
- Week 12
- 10–15% body weight loss at moderate doses.
- Week 24–48
- Peak loss — 17–24% depending on dose. Plateau usually hits around month 10.
Dosing & titration
Side effects & risks
- Nausea (most common, especially during titration)
- Vomiting, diarrhea, or constipation
- Fatigue and decreased exercise tolerance
- Hair shedding (months 3–6, usually temporary)
- Significant muscle loss if not paired with protein + resistance training
- Heart rate elevation (5–10 bpm typical)
- Rare: gallstones from rapid weight loss, pancreatitis
Typical price
Studies
- Triple-Hormone-Receptor Agonist Retatrutide for Obesity — A Phase 2 Trial — The landmark NEJM paper showing 24.2% weight loss at 48 weeks (12 mg dose). NEJM New England Journal of Medicine, 2023
- Retatrutide Phase 2 trial in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) — Showed up to 80% relative reduction in liver fat. Nature Medicine Nature Medicine, 2024
- Triple-Hormone-Receptor Agonist Retatrutide for Obesity — A Phase 2 Trial (PubMed) — Detailed efficacy and safety data. PubMed PubMed, 2023
- Eli Lilly press release: Phase 2 results — Industry summary including safety extension data. Lilly Investor Relations Eli Lilly, 2023
Educational reference only. Not medical advice. Retatrutide is investigational — not FDA-approved as of 2026. Phase 3 trials ongoing. Use only via licensed prescriber and compounding pharmacy.