What people often ask
Is cagrilintide a GLP-1 drug?
No. It's an amylin analog. Different hormone, different receptors. Both are pancreatic-secreted peptides, both reduce appetite, but they work through separate pathways, which is the rationale for combining them in CagriSema.
Is it FDA-approved?
No. Cagrilintide is in Phase 3 development as part of the CagriSema combination. As of May 2026 it is not FDA-approved as monotherapy or in combination.
How does it compare to semaglutide alone?
In Phase 2, monotherapy cagrilintide produced about 10.8% mean weight loss versus semaglutide's ~14.9% in STEP-1. So less effective alone. The combination of the two outperforms either alone, which is the rationale for CagriSema.
How does CagriSema compare to tirzepatide (Zepbound)?
REDEFINE-1 reported ~22.7% weight loss with CagriSema. SURMOUNT-1 reported ~22.5% with tirzepatide. SURMOUNT-5's head-to-head showed tirzepatide outperforming semaglutide alone. CagriSema's numbers are competitive but didn't blow tirzepatide out of the water, which contributed to the Novo stock reaction in late 2024 / early 2025.
What about side effects?
Cagrilintide's side-effect profile is similar to other amylin analogs and to GLP-1 drugs, primarily gastrointestinal (nausea, vomiting). The CagriSema combination has shown a similar profile to semaglutide alone in early data.
How is amylin different from insulin?
They're co-secreted from pancreatic beta cells (so released together when you eat) but they do different things. Insulin lowers blood glucose by signaling tissues to take up sugar. Amylin slows stomach emptying, suppresses glucagon, and signals satiety. Both are part of the post-meal hormonal response.
How can I get it?
Through a clinical trial. ClinicalTrials.gov has the active CagriSema trials searchable. Anything sold as "cagrilintide" or "CagriSema" outside trials isn't the FDA-approved drug.