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Triple hormone receptor agonist retatrutide for metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease: a randomized phase 2a trial.

Nat Med · 2024

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a 24-week study of 98 people with liver fat issues, those given retatrutide saw liver fat reductions ranging from 42.9% (1 mg dose) to 82.4% (12 mg dose), compared to a 0.3% increase in the placebo group. Normal liver fat levels were reached by 27% of participants on the lowest dose and up to 86% on the highest dose, while none in the placebo group achieved this. The reductions in liver fat were linked to improvements in body weight, abdominal fat, and metabolic measures.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalNat Med, 2024
Citations191
Relative citation ratio38.34
NIH percentile100
Molecules retatrutide
Conditions studied Mash

Abstract

Retatrutide is a novel triple agonist of the glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide, glucagon-like peptide 1 and glucagon receptors. A 48-week phase 2 obesity study demonstrated weight reductions of 22.8% and 24.2% with retatrutide 8 and 12 mg, respectively. The primary objective of this substudy was to assess mean relative change from baseline in liver fat (LF) at 24 weeks in participants from that study with metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease and ≥10% of LF. Here, in this randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial, participants (n = 98) were randomly assigned to 48 weeks of once-weekly subcutaneous retatrutide (1, 4, 8 or 12 mg dose) or placebo. The mean relative change from baseline in LF at 24 weeks was -42.9% (1 mg), -57.0% (4 mg), -81.4% (8 mg), -82.4% (12 mg) and +0.3% (placebo) (all P < 0.001 versus placebo). At 24 weeks, normal LF (<5%) was achieved by 27% (1 mg), 52% (4 mg), 79% (8 mg), 86% (12 mg) and 0% (placebo) of participants. LF reductions were significantly related to changes in body weight, abdominal fat and metabolic measures associated with improved insulin sensitivity and lipid metabolism. The ClinicalTrials.gov registration is NCT04881760 .

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 38858523 ↗

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