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CagriSema vs Teriparatide

A detailed comparison to help you understand the differences and choose the right peptide for your research goals.

CagriSema

CagriSema is a fixed-ratio combination of cagrilintide (a long-acting amylin analog) and semaglutide, developed by Novo Nordisk. By combining two distinct appetite-regulating peptide hormones, CagriSema aims to achieve greater weight loss than semaglutide alone. Phase 3 data showed 22.7% body weight reduction, and an FDA response is expected in 2026.

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Teriparatide

Teriparatide (Forteo) is recombinant human parathyroid hormone (1-34), FDA-approved for osteoporosis treatment. It's unique among osteoporosis drugs in that it stimulates new bone formation.

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Side-by-Side Comparison

AspectCagriSemaTeriparatide
MechanismCagriSema combines two complementary peptide mechanisms: (1) Semaglutide — GLP-1 receptor agonist providing glucose-dependent insulin secretion, glucagon suppression, delayed gastric emptying, and hypothalamic appetite suppression. (2) Cagrilintide — a long-acting analog of amylin, a peptide hormone co-secreted with insulin from pancreatic beta cells. Amylin activates amylin receptors (calcitonin receptor + RAMP complexes) in the area postrema and hypothalamus, providing additional appetite suppression via a distinct neuronal pathway from GLP-1. The combination produces additive weight loss by engaging two independent satiety signaling systems.Intermittent PTH exposure paradoxically stimulates osteoblasts more than osteoclasts, resulting in net bone formation. Continuous exposure would cause bone loss, but pulsatile dosing builds bone.
Typical DosagePhase 3 trial doses: cagrilintide 2.4 mg + semaglutide 2.4 mg weekly (fixed combination in a single injection). Dose escalation: start at cagrilintide 0.15 mg / semaglutide 0.25 mg weekly and escalate over 16 weeks to the maintenance dose. Administered as a single injection combining both peptides.20mcg subcutaneously once daily. Maximum treatment duration of 2 years due to theoretical osteosarcoma risk from rat studies.
AdministrationSingle subcutaneous injection once weekly, combining both peptides. Pre-filled pen device. Not yet commercially available. FDA response expected 2026.Subcutaneous injection in thigh or abdomen once daily. Delivered via multi-dose pen. Should sit or lie down after injection due to orthostatic hypotension risk.
Side EffectsPhase 3 data: nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, constipation (similar profile to semaglutide alone, but some reports suggest modestly higher GI rates). Decreased appetite. Injection site reactions.Orthostatic hypotension, leg cramps, nausea, dizziness, headache, and injection site reactions. Transient hypercalcemia possible.
Best For

Key Differences

Unique to CagriSema:

Unique to Teriparatide:

Detailed Analysis

Commonalities

CagriSema and Teriparatide are used for different purposes and have limited overlap in their applications.

Which Should You Choose?

Choose CagriSema for Weight Loss, Diabetes Management. Choose Teriparatide for Recovery & Healing.

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