What Is CagriSema? The Semaglutide-Amylin Combination Explained
CagriSema is an investigational once-weekly injection from Novo Nordisk that combines two drugs in a single shot: semaglutide (the GLP-1 medication in Wegovy and Ozempic) and cagrilintide (a long-acting amylin analog that is itself still experimental). It is not FDA approved and is not available by prescription, from TrimRx or anywhere else, as of mid-2026. In its largest trial it produced about 22.7% average weight loss. Novo Nordisk filed for FDA approval in December 2025, with a decision expected in late 2026. Here is what it is, how it works, and where it fits.
Two drugs, one injection
CagriSema pairs two molecules that curb appetite through different pathways. Semaglutide is a GLP-1 receptor agonist that reduces hunger and slows how fast the stomach empties, the same active ingredient in Wegovy and Ozempic. Cagrilintide is an amylin analog, and amylin is a hormone that signals fullness through the brainstem, working alongside GLP-1 rather than duplicating it.
Combining them is the whole idea: two satiety signals instead of one. If it reaches the market, CagriSema would be the first fixed-dose amylin-plus-GLP-1 combination for weight management. The studied dose is 2.4 mg of each component, given as one weekly subcutaneous injection.
How well does it work?
| Trial | Population | Average weight loss | In-trial comparison |
|---|---|---|---|
| REDEFINE 1 | Obesity, no diabetes | ~22.7% (adherent) | Semaglutide alone ~16%; placebo ~3% |
| REDEFINE 2 | Obesity + type 2 diabetes | ~15.7% | Placebo ~3% |
In REDEFINE 1, the main obesity trial of 3,417 adults, CagriSema produced about 22.7% average weight loss over 68 weeks in people who stayed on treatment, compared with roughly 16% for semaglutide alone in the same study. That puts CagriSema in the same range as tirzepatide (Zepbound) and clearly ahead of semaglutide on its own.
One nuance worth knowing: that 22.7% came in below what Novo Nordisk had projected (around 25%), which disappointed investors when the data first read out. The drug works well; it simply did not clear the very high bar some had set.
In REDEFINE 2, which enrolled people with type 2 diabetes, average weight loss was about 15.7%, lower because weight reduction tends to run smaller in people with diabetes, a pattern seen across this drug class.
Side effects
Because semaglutide is one of its components, CagriSema’s side effects look like the GLP-1 class you may already know. In trials the most common were gastrointestinal: nausea (around 55% of participants), constipation, and vomiting, mostly mild to moderate and concentrated during the dose-increase period. Discontinuation due to side effects was low, at roughly 6%.
When could it be available?
Novo Nordisk submitted CagriSema to the FDA in December 2025, based on the REDEFINE 1 and REDEFINE 2 results. The company has said it expects an FDA decision by late 2026. If approved, a commercial launch would likely follow in late 2026 or early 2027. Until then, the only way to access CagriSema is through a clinical trial. It cannot be prescribed or compounded, and any product sold online as “CagriSema” is not the real, regulated medication.
How CagriSema compares to what’s available now
CagriSema is not the only high-efficacy option, and the approved drugs are available today. Tirzepatide (Zepbound) has produced around 20% average weight loss in its trials, and semaglutide (Wegovy) delivers roughly 15% with the added benefit of a proven cardiovascular indication. Both can be prescribed now, and both have far longer real-world track records than CagriSema, which has not yet been used outside of trials.
Should you wait for it?
Consider a scenario where someone is researching their options and wants the most effective drug possible. The reasonable approach is usually not to wait one to two years for a drug that may or may not be approved on schedule. It is to start an approved, available medication now and reassess if CagriSema launches and turns out to fit better. Weight that comes off sooner is weight you are not carrying while you wait, and decisions like how long to stay on a GLP-1 are easier to make with a drug you can actually start.
If you want to know which approved option fits your situation, you can take a quick online assessment to see if you’re a candidate, and keep CagriSema on your radar for when it clears the FDA.
This article is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. CagriSema is an investigational combination that is not FDA approved and is not available by prescription or through compounding; the trial figures described come from clinical studies, not from a medication you can obtain. Always consult a licensed healthcare provider before starting, stopping, or changing any treatment.
Transforming Lives, One Step at a Time
Keep reading
Retatrutide vs Semaglutide: What’s Different
Semaglutide is the GLP-1 medication most people have heard of, sold as Ozempic and Wegovy and now available as a once-daily pill too. It’s…
TrimRx vs HealthRX.com for Compounded Semaglutide: Side-by-Side
Introduction Choosing between TrimRX and healthrx.com semaglutide programs is a choice between two good structures: TrimRX runs a flat $199 per month compounded program…
TrimRx vs FormBlends for Compounded Semaglutide: Side-by-Side
Introduction If you want compounded semaglutide through telehealth in 2026, TrimRX and FormBlends are two of the more credible places to get it, and…