May 12, 2025 at 5:58 PM#1
The superiority of tirzepatide over semaglutide in the SURPASS and SURMOUNT trials demands a pharmacological explanation. Let's dissect GIP receptor (GIPR) pharmacology and the mechanistic basis for synergy with GLP-1R agonism.
First, the clinical context:
> "In the SURMOUNT-5 trial, tirzepatide 10/15 mg achieved 20.2% mean weight loss vs. 13.7% for semaglutide 2.4 mg at 72 weeks (estimated treatment difference −6.5 percentage points, P<0.001)."
> — Frías et al., *New England Journal of Medicine*, 2024 (in press)
The ~6-7% additional weight loss with tirzepatide must derive from GIPR agonism (or its interaction with GLP-1R agonism), since the GLP-1R component alone cannot explain the difference. But here's the paradox: GIP alone doesn't cause weight loss. In fact, GIPR knockout mice are resistant to diet-induced obesity, and GIPR antagonist antibodies ALSO cause weight loss.
So how can both GIPR agonism AND GIPR antagonism lead to weight loss? This is the central mystery in incretin pharmacology right now.
49 14Dr.NutriCornell, pam_stl, wei_SG and 46 others
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