Pfizer's danuglipron has had a rocky development path, and I think it's worth discussing why, because the challenges illuminate important principles about drug development in the GLP-1 space.
Danuglipron is a non-peptide, small-molecule GLP-1 receptor agonist — same concept as Lilly's orforglipron. But there's a critical difference: danuglipron requires twice-daily (BID) dosing due to its shorter half-life, whereas orforglipron is once-daily.
Why does this matter?
- Adherence: BID dosing has consistently worse adherence than QD dosing across therapeutic areas. For chronic conditions requiring indefinite treatment, this is a major handicap.
- GI tolerability: BID dosing means two daily spikes in GLP-1 receptor activation, potentially leading to more frequent nausea events throughout the day compared to the smoother pharmacokinetics of a once-daily drug.
- Competitive positioning: When your direct competitor (orforglipron) is once-daily, being twice-daily is a significant marketing disadvantage.
Pfizer initially reported Phase 2 data showing ~6-8% weight loss at higher doses, which was already below orforglipron's ~15%. Combined with the BID burden and a concerning discontinuation rate due to GI side effects, Pfizer paused development of the original formulation and pivoted to a modified-release (MR) once-daily formulation.
The question: can Pfizer rescue danuglipron with the MR formulation, or is the molecule fundamentally at a disadvantage?