PeptideTrace
InvestigationalDual GLP-1/Glucagon Receptor AgonistWeight Management

Mazdutide (IBI362, LY3305677)

C

Evidence Grade C — Moderate human evidence. 38 published studies, 28 human. 31 registered clinical trials.

31 trials38 studiesUSEUCA

Medically reviewed by a licensed medical professional

Overview

Mazdutide is a dual GLP-1/glucagon receptor agonist developed primarily in China, where it has already been approved for weight management — making it the first drug in its class to reach any market. The glucagon component adds a mechanism that increases energy expenditure and burns liver fat, complementing the appetite suppression from GLP-1. Development for markets outside China is ongoing.

Also Known As

Mazdutide is also known by these brand and alternate names:

Research Activity

38studies
Human 28
Animal 1
In-vitro 1
Reviews 21

38 published studies: 28 human, 1 animal, 1 in-vitro, 21 reviews

Regulatory Status

US
Not approved by FDA(FDA)
EU
Not authorised by EMA(EMA)
CA
Not approved by Health Canada(Health Canada)

Legal Status

USNot applicable (not approved)
EUNot applicable (not authorised)
CANot applicable (not approved)

Summary

Mazdutide has been approved in China (as Moshutai) for weight management and is in Phase III development for other markets. In the Chinese Phase III GLORY-1 trial (610 patients), the 6 mg dose achieved approximately 15% weight loss at 48 weeks with 80% liver fat reduction in participants with baseline hepatic steatosis.

Mazdutide's approval in China makes it the first dual GLP-1/glucagon agonist to receive marketing authorisation anywhere. The dramatic liver fat reduction may position it strongly for metabolic liver disease indications. Development for non-Chinese markets is ongoing.

Mechanism of Action

Mazdutide combines GLP-1 receptor activation (appetite suppression) with glucagon receptor activation (increased energy expenditure and liver fat burning), similar in concept to survodutide (#160). The glucagon component directly stimulates hepatic fat oxidation, which produces significant liver fat reduction alongside weight loss.

Research Summary

In the Chinese Phase III GLORY-1 trial (610 patients), the highest dose achieved approximately 15% weight loss at 48 weeks, with an 80% reduction in liver fat in participants who had fatty liver at baseline. The dramatic liver fat reduction may position mazdutide strongly for metabolic liver disease, a massive unmet need. Head-to-head data showed superiority over semaglutide for both weight loss and blood sugar control in Chinese patients. Key limitations include that all Phase III evidence comes from Chinese populations only, and development outside China remains at Phase II. Eli Lilly holds the rights for markets outside China, and their Phase 2 trial results will determine whether a global filing is pursued. Remarkably low discontinuation rates (0.5-2.9%) suggest favourable tolerability. Survodutide, a competing dual GLP-1/glucagon agonist from Boehringer Ingelheim, is also in advanced development.

Clinical Trials

PeptideTrace tracks 31 registered clinical trials for Mazdutide sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov.

NCT07469800Phase IIIRecruiting

Efficacy and Safety of IBI362 in Hypertensive Patients With Overweight/Obesity

Innovent Biologics (Suzhou) Co. Ltd.Endpoint: To evaluate the effect of IBI362 on mean sitting systolic blood pressure (msSBP) compared with placebo at Week 16 of treatment.Completion: 2027-04-15
NCT07517042N/ARecruiting

ASCEND-1: Lifestyle Intervention Plus Mazdutide for Weight Management

Shanghai Zhongshan HospitalEndpoint: Percentage change of body weightCompletion: 2028-12-01
NCT07417306Phase IIINot Yet Recruiting

A Study of HDM1005 in Participants With T2DM Not Controlled With Metformin Alone or in Combination With a Sodium-Glucose Cotransporter 2 (SGLT2) Inhibitor

Hangzhou Zhongmei Huadong Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd.Endpoint: Change from baseline in Hemoglobin A1c (HbA1c)Completion: 2027-12-31
NCT07255209Phase IIIRecruiting

A Study of IBI362 in Chinese Adolescents With Obesity or Overweight

Innovent Biologics (Suzhou) Co. Ltd.Endpoint: Percent Change from Baseline in BMICompletion: 2028-10-31
NCT07135141N/ANot Yet Recruiting

Mazdutide as Adjuvant Therapy Following Sleeve Gastrectomy in Severe Obesity

Beijing Friendship HospitalEndpoint: the rate of excess weight loss(EWL%) compared to baselineCompletion: 2029-09-30
View all 31 trials on ClinicalTrials.gov →

Scientific Detail

Overview (Scientific)

Mazdutide (IBI362/LY3305677) is a 34-amino-acid oxyntomodulin analog with C20 fatty diacid acylation, developed by Innovent Biologics (China rights) and Eli Lilly (ex-China rights). Molecular weight approximately 4,476-4,563 Da; molecular formula C207H317N45O65. CAS number: 2259884-03-0. Trade name: Xinermei (China). The compound received NMPA approval in China for obesity in June 2025 and for type 2 diabetes in September 2025, making it the world's first approved dual GCG/GLP-1 receptor agonist. Eli Lilly is conducting a separate US Phase 2 trial with approximately 179 participants.

Mechanism of Action (Scientific)

Mazdutide provides dual agonism at GLP-1R (Ki 28.6 nM) and GCGR (Ki 17.7 nM). The GLP-1 component suppresses appetite, delays gastric emptying, and enhances insulin secretion. The glucagon receptor component directly stimulates hepatic lipid oxidation, promotes thermogenesis, and induces FGF21 secretion, while GLP-1 activity offsets glucagon's potential hyperglycemic effects. This dual mechanism provides both weight loss and direct hepatic metabolic benefits.

Summary (Scientific)

GLORY-1 Phase 3 (NCT05607680; N=610; NEJM May 2025): the 6 mg dose achieved -14.84% weight loss at 48 weeks (efficacy estimand) versus -0.47% placebo, with liver fat reduction of -80.2% in participants with baseline hepatic steatosis of at least 10%. GLORY-2 (N approximately 450): the 9 mg dose achieved -18.55% at 60 weeks with 44.0% of participants achieving at least 20% weight loss. DREAMS-1 (N approximately 320): HbA1c reduction of -2.15% at 6 mg. DREAMS-3 head-to-head versus semaglutide: mazdutide demonstrated superior weight loss (-10.29% versus -6.00%; P<0.05) and composite endpoint (48.0% versus 21.0%; P<0.0001). Treatment discontinuation rates were remarkably low at 0.5-2.9% across Phase 3 trials, and two Phase 3 results were published back-to-back in Nature in 2025.

The information on this page is provided for educational and research reference purposes only. This is not medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making any health-related decisions.

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Related Compounds

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Research Compound
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Danuglipron's original twice-daily formulation achieved 8–13% weight loss in Phase IIb but with treatment discontinuation rates exceeding 50%, with nausea affecting up to 73% of patients. Pfizer discontinued the twice-daily formulation and is developing a once-daily modified-release version. Danuglipron is not a peptide. Its development trajectory illustrates that even effective weight loss compounds can fail commercially if tolerability is inadequate. The reformulation effort aims to reduce peak drug concentrations that likely drive the gastrointestinal side effects.

Setmelanotide

Approved
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Setmelanotide is marketed as Imcivree (Rhythm Pharmaceuticals; approved November 2020 for POMC, PCSK1, or LEPR deficiency; June 2022 for Bardet-Biedl syndrome; December 2024 expanded to patients aged 2 years and older). Genetic testing confirming an eligible mutation is required before treatment. In patients with POMC or PCSK1 deficiency, approximately 80% achieved at least 10% weight loss in clinical trials. In Bardet-Biedl syndrome, 32.3% achieved the same threshold. The most common side effects are injection-site reactions and skin darkening (due to the melanocortin pathway's connection to pigmentation). Setmelanotide exemplifies precision medicine — it is highly effective in the specific genetic populations it targets but is not indicated for common obesity.

CT-388

Investigational
Biased Dual GIP/GLP-1 Agonist

CT-388 is in Phase II/III development (not yet approved). Phase II results (469 patients, 48 weeks) showed 22.5% placebo-adjusted weight loss at the highest dose, with low discontinuation rates due to adverse events (5.9%). Phase III trials are underway. The combination of high efficacy and low discontinuation rates in Phase II is notable — many obesity drugs achieve high weight loss but suffer from tolerability-driven dropouts. Roche's $2.7 billion acquisition of the developer signals significant confidence in the programme.

Related Research

This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a qualified healthcare professional before making decisions about your health.