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ForumsClinical Trials & ResearchOrforglipron ATTAIN-4 — looking for input

Orforglipron ATTAIN-4 — looking for input

LabKate Wed, Nov 12, 2025 at 2:59 PM 14 replies 1,111 viewsPage 1 of 3
LabKate
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Nov 12, 2025 at 4:24 PM#1

Let's discuss orforglipron — Eli Lilly's oral non-peptide GLP-1 receptor agonist currently in Phase 3 (ATTAIN program). This is a fundamentally different molecule from oral semaglutide. Semaglutide is a peptide that requires the SNAC absorption enhancer and must be taken fasting with minimal water. Orforglipron is a small molecule — no fasting requirement, no absorption enhancer, and potentially much cheaper to manufacture.

The Phase 2 data were published by Wharton et al. in the NEJM[1]:

Design: Phase 2, dose-finding. N = 272 adults with BMI >= 30 (or >= 27 with comorbidity), without diabetes. Multiple dose cohorts (12, 24, 36, 45 mg daily). 36 weeks.

Results (treatment estimand, 36 weeks):

  • Placebo: -2.0%
  • 12 mg: -8.6%
  • 24 mg: -12.6%
  • 36 mg: -12.4%
  • 45 mg: -14.7%

At 36 weeks and still declining. Not as dramatic as retatrutide, but competitive with injectable semaglutide at a similar timepoint. And it's a pill.

The ATTAIN Phase 3 program includes trials in obesity (ATTAIN-1), obesity with T2D (ATTAIN-2), and CV outcomes (ATTAIN-4). This is a full development program targeting FDA approval.

[1] Wharton S, et al. N Engl J Med. 2023;389(10):877-888.

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Dr.NateNeph
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Nov 12, 2025 at 4:41 PM#2

The manufacturing story is what excites me most. Oral semaglutide (Rybelsus) requires the SNAC enhancer, has ~1% bioavailability, and needs 14 mg oral to approximate 0.5 mg injectable. That's incredibly wasteful from a manufacturing standpoint and limits cost reduction potential.

Orforglipron is a small molecule made by standard pharmaceutical chemistry — no peptide synthesis, no complex formulation. If it works, it could break the supply and cost bottleneck that has plagued GLP-1 RAs. Lilly has said it expects manufacturing costs to be "substantially lower" than injectable GLP-1 RAs.

Of course, "if it works" is doing a lot of heavy lifting. Phase 2 was small (n=272) and short (36 weeks). We need Phase 3 to confirm efficacy, assess longer-term safety, and understand the full dose-response. ATTAIN-1 results are expected in mid-2025.

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wendy_avl
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Asheville, NC
Nov 12, 2025 at 4:58 PM#3

Let me do a cross-compound comparison at similar timepoints. At 36-40 weeks:

  • Orforglipron 45 mg oral daily: -14.7% (Phase 2, 36 wks)
  • Semaglutide 2.4 mg SC weekly: ~-12.5% (STEP 1 at week 36 extrapolated from the published curve)[2]
  • Oral semaglutide 50 mg daily: -15.1% (OASIS-1, 68 weeks, though not directly comparable)[3]
  • Tirzepatide 15 mg SC weekly: ~-16% (SURMOUNT-1 at week 36, extrapolated)

Orforglipron is competitive but likely won't match tirzepatide's dual-agonist efficacy. Its advantage is the oral route, small molecule manufacturing, and potential for lower cost. For many patients, a daily pill that achieves 12-15% weight loss is preferable to a weekly injection that achieves 15-21%.

[2] Wilding JPH, et al. N Engl J Med. 2021;384(11):989-1002.

[3] Knop FK, et al. Lancet. 2023;402(10403):705-719.

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Dr.SleepRoch
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Nov 12, 2025 at 5:15 PM#4

I have a pharmacology question. If orforglipron is a non-peptide small molecule, does it bind to the GLP-1 receptor in the same way as native GLP-1 and semaglutide? And does that matter for efficacy or safety?

I'm wondering if different binding modes could lead to different signaling profiles — what pharmacologists call "biased agonism." Could orforglipron have a different balance of G-protein vs beta-arrestin signaling compared to peptide GLP-1 RAs?

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hans_munich
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Nov 12, 2025 at 5:32 PM#5

Excellent pharmacology question. You're right that binding mode matters. Orforglipron binds to an allosteric site on the GLP-1 receptor, distinct from the orthosteric site where native GLP-1 and semaglutide bind[4]. Despite this, it appears to be a full agonist with a signaling profile that closely mimics peptide GLP-1 RAs in terms of cAMP generation and insulin secretion.

There are subtle differences in receptor internalization and recycling kinetics. Preclinical data suggests orforglipron may cause less beta-arrestin-mediated receptor internalization than peptide agonists. In theory, this could result in less tachyphylaxis (receptor desensitization) over time — but this is speculative and unproven in humans.

From a safety perspective, the Phase 2 data showed a very similar adverse event profile to peptide GLP-1 RAs (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea as the most common). No novel safety signals. This suggests the clinical effects are mediated through the same downstream pathways.

[4] Kawai T, et al. Proc Natl Acad Sci USA. 2020;117(47):29959-29967.

Last edited: Nov 12, 2025 at 11:32 PM
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