Informational only. Not medical advice.INFORMATIONAL PLATFORM ONLY — NOT MEDICAL ADVICE, DIAGNOSIS, OR TREATMENT
Head-to-head comparison of Cagrilintide and Tesofensine — mechanism, side effects, legal status, and pricing.
Cagrilintide is a long-acting acylated amylin analog developed by Novo Nordisk. It is investigational and not FDA-approved; Novo Nordisk's lead development path is the CagriSema co-formulation with semaglutide for weight management. Monotherapy cagrilintide was evaluated in Phase 2 but was deprioritized in favor of the combination.
Tesofensine is a small-molecule triple monoamine reuptake inhibitor (serotonin, norepinephrine, dopamine) — NOT a peptide. Originally developed by NeuroSearch for Parkinson's and Alzheimer's disease (which it failed to benefit) and repositioned for obesity by Saniona. Not FDA-approved in the US.
Cagrilintide
Tesofensine
Category
Legal Status
Mechanism
Side Effects
COA-verified vendors · trust score ≥70 required · single-vial price — bulk/bundle deals may be lower
Cagrilintide
Tesofensine
COA corpus from Disclosed Labs — independently tested batches only.
Cagrilintide
79
COAs
99.7%
Avg purity
13
Labs
Tesofensine
15
COAs
99.4%
Avg purity
6
Labs
A Phase 2 dose-finding trial of cagrilintide monotherapy demonstrated dose-dependent weight loss of up to 10.8% over 26 weeks versus 3.0% for placebo (Lau et al., The Lancet, 2021). Novo Nordisk pivoted development to the CagriSema co-formulation with semaglutide 2.4 mg. The Phase 3 REDEFINE 1 trial (n=3,417, 68 weeks) in obesity reported ~22.7% mean body weight reduction on the treatment-policy estimand, with 91.9% achieving ≥5% weight loss versus 31.5% for placebo. Novo Nordisk submitted a CagriSema NDA to the FDA in December 2025; the application is under review in 2026. Cagrilintide is not FDA-approved as a standalone therapy, and CagriSema is not yet approved as of April 2026.
Key references
Pivotal Phase 2 (Astrup et al., Lancet 2008, n=203, 24 weeks, Denmark) showed placebo-subtracted weight loss of 4.5%, 9.2%, and 10.6% at 0.25, 0.5, and 1.0 mg/day — roughly twice orlistat at 0.5 mg. (The Lancet issued an expression of concern about that trial in 2013.) Saniona's Mexico partner Medix ran a Phase 3 registration study that met its primary endpoint; Medix filed with COFEPRIS in May 2023 with supplemental data submitted in 2024. As of April 2026 a final Mexican approval decision is still pending — the commonly repeated '2022 Mexico approval' claim is inaccurate. Tesomet (tesofensine + metoprolol, intended to blunt cardiovascular signal) is in development for hypothalamic obesity and Prader-Willi syndrome.
Cagrilintide and Tesofensine are both in the Metabolic category and may have overlapping mechanisms. Researchers should review both profiles carefully, understand the mechanisms of action, and monitor the relevant biomarkers when combining compounds in the same class. As always, consult a licensed healthcare provider before making any decisions about combining research compounds.
This platform provides informational tools only, not medical advice. This comparison is for educational purposes only. Consult a licensed provider.
Contraindications
Lab Testing