What this is
- is a critical global health issue, affecting over one billion people.
- Injectable have shown significant weight loss but face barriers to use.
- Oral GLP-1 therapies, including orforglipron and oral semaglutide, have demonstrated promising results in recent trials, offering a non-injection alternative.
Essence
- Oral can achieve clinically meaningful weight loss and metabolic improvements in adults with . The ATTAIN-1 and OASIS-4 trials show that these therapies may expand treatment options beyond injections.
Key takeaways
- Orforglipron led to a mean weight loss of 11.2% in 3,127 adults over 72 weeks, with 54.6% achieving ≥ 10% weight loss. This indicates that oral therapy can be effective for weight management.
- Oral semaglutide resulted in a mean weight loss of 13.6% in 307 adults over 64 weeks, with 63% achieving ≥ 10% weight loss. These results support the potential of oral formulations in treatment.
- Both trials showed gastrointestinal side effects consistent with the GLP-1 class, along with specific safety signals like mild pancreatitis for orforglipron. Monitoring for these effects will be essential in clinical practice.
Caveats
- The OASIS-4 trial had a smaller and less diverse population, primarily comprising women and white participants, which limits the generalizability of its findings.
- Real-world adoption of these therapies will depend on factors like adherence, tolerability, long-term safety, and cost, which are not fully addressed in the trials.
Definitions
- GLP-1 receptor agonists: A class of medications that mimic the action of the glucagon-like peptide-1 hormone, promoting insulin secretion and reducing appetite.
- obesity: A medical condition characterized by excessive body fat, often defined by a body mass index (BMI) of 30 or higher.
Simplified
The obesity epidemic and the therapeutic gap
Obesity remains one of the most pressing global health crises of the 21st century. The World Health Organization estimates that over one billion people worldwide are living with obesity, and the prevalence continues to rise [6, 7]. Obesity is a major driver of type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease, liver disease, and certain cancers [8]. Yet, despite its scale and complexity, treatment options remain limited and often underutilized.
Lifestyle modification alone produces modest and often unsustained weight loss. Bariatric surgery is effective but invasive, resource-intensive, and not suitable for all patients [9 –11]. Pharmacotherapy, once a peripheral player in obesity care, has surged into the spotlight with the arrival of highly effective injectable incretin-based therapies such as semaglutide and tirzepatide [3 –5, 12, 13]. These agents have reshaped expectations of what medical therapy for obesity can achieve, with average weight reductions of 15–20% in clinical trials.
However, injections remain a barrier for some patients. Stigma, needle aversion, cost, and the logistics of storage and administration can limit uptake. The idea of a once-daily pill with comparable efficacy has therefore been a holy grail for the field. The new NEJM trials of oral orforglipron and high-dose oral semaglutide [1, 2] represent the closest we have come to that reality.
The trials at a glance
Orforglipron – The ATTAIN-1 trial
Participants: 3,127 adults with obesity, without diabetes. Duration: 72 weeks. Mean BMI: ~37 kg/m². Results: Mean weight loss of − 11.2% at the 36 mg dose; 54.6% achieved ≥ 10% weight loss; -Improvements in waist circumference, blood pressure, and lipids. Safety: Gastrointestinal adverse events frequent but manageable; Five cases of mild pancreatitis; Modest increase in heart rate observed.
This was a large, multinational study with broad representation across sex, age, and ethnicity. Its scale enhances the generalizability of findings and provides a solid foundation for regulatory consideration [1].
Oral semaglutide 25 mg – The OASIS-4 trial
Participants: 307 adults with obesity, without diabetes. Duration: 64 weeks. Mean BMI: ~37 kg/m². Results: Mean weight loss of − 13.6%; 63% achieved ≥ 10% weight loss; Improvements in HbA1c, triglycerides, and inflammatory markers. Safety: Gastrointestinal side effects consistent with GLP-1 class; reports of mild dysesthesia in a small number of participants.
OASIS-4 was smaller and less diverse, with most participants being women and white. While the results are striking, the limited demographic scope tempers broad extrapolation [2].
Shared findings and GLP-1 class effect
Both trials reaffirm several key points, including: Adults with obesity but without diabetes can achieve clinically meaningful weight reduction with oral GLP-1 therapy; the metabolic benefits extend beyond weight loss, with improvements in blood pressure, lipid profile, glycemic markers, and inflammatory parameters; the side-effect profile remains consistent with the GLP-1 class, dominated by gastrointestinal symptoms such as nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea [14, 15].
These results strengthen the evidence that the GLP-1 pathway is a central and powerful lever in obesity management [16 –18]. Whether injectable or oral, the mechanism appears to deliver robust benefits that translate into improvements in cardiometabolic health.
Key differences and their clinical relevance
Despite these commonalities, several differences between the two oral agents may shape their clinical adoption.
Trial Design and Population
ATTAIN-1 was larger and geographically diverse, enhancing external validity [1].OASIS-4 was smaller, less diverse, and weighted toward female participants [2].
Administration
Orforglipron is taken without special restrictions, a convenience advantage. Oral semaglutide requires ingestion in a fasting state with ≤ 120 ml of water, followed by a 30-minute wait before eating, drinking, or taking other medications — a regimen that may challenge adherence in real-world settings.
Lifestyle Interventions
ATTAIN-1: participants received healthy lifestyle advice. OASIS-4: participants were prescribed a standardized 500 kcal daily deficit.
These differences may complicate cross-trial efficacy comparisons.
Safety Signals
Orforglipron: pancreatitis (5 mild cases), heart-rate increase. Oral semaglutide: dysesthesia, an unusual finding that warrants further exploration.
These distinctions (see also Table 1) may appear subtle, but in clinical practice, they can significantly shape patient preference, adherence, and long-term outcomes.
| Orforglipron (oral)ATTAIN-1 | Oral Semaglutide 25 mgOASIS-4 | Injectable Semaglutide 2.4 mg ()STEP-1Wegovy | Tirzepatide 15 mg (s.c.)SURMOUNT-1 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Trial size (duration) | 3,127 (72 weeks) | 307 (64 weeks) | ~ 1,961 (68 weeks) | ~ 2,539 (72 weeks) |
| Population | Adults with obesity, no diabetes; mean BMI ~ 37; multinational, diverse | Adults with overweight/obesity, no diabetes; mean BMI ~ 37; mostly women, White | Adults with overweight/obesity, no diabetes; broad trial population | Adults with overweight/obesity, no diabetes; broad multinational enrollment |
| Co-intervention (lifestyle) | Lifestyle advice (not a standardized 500 kcal deficit) | Standardized 500 kcal/day deficit | Intensive lifestyle program (STEP) | Brief monthly lifestyle counselling |
| Mean % weight change (active arm) | −11.2% at 36 mg | −13.6% | −14.9% | −20.9% |
| Mean % weight change (placebo) | −0.9% to − 2.0% | −2.2% | −2.4% | −3.1% |
| Placebo-adjusted mean difference | −9.5 to − 11.5 percentage points | −11.4 percentage points | −12.4 percentage points | −17.8 percentage points |
| % achieving ≥ 10% weight loss | 55–60% | 63% | 69.1% | ~ 75% |
| % achieving ≥ 15% weight loss | ~ 36–39% | ~ 50% | 50.5% | ~ 57% |
| % achieving ≥ 20% weight loss | ~ 18% | ~ 30% | ~ 33% | ~ 50%+ |
| GI adverse events | Frequent (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea) | Frequent, dose-related | Frequent, manageable with titration | Frequent, mild-to-moderate |
| Other safety signals | 5 mild pancreatitis cases; modest HR increase | Mild dysesthesia; otherwise class-consistent | Class-consistent; ongoing monitoring for pancreatitis/thyroid | Class-consistent; long-term safety under study |
| Administration | Daily oral; no restrictions | Daily oral; fasting, ≤ 120 mL water, 30-min wait | Weekly subcutaneous injection; refrigeration, training | Weekly subcutaneous injection; titration, training |
| Discontinuations due to AEs | ~ 10% (mostly GI) | Higher than placebo (mostly GI) | Modest; titration helps | 6–7% at high dose |
| Approximate NNT for ≥ 10% WL | ~ 3–4 (active ~ 55–60% vs. placebo ~ 17–20%) | ~ 2 (63% vs. ~ 11%) | ~ 2 (69.1% vs. 12%) | ~ 2 (75% vs. ~ 13–15%) |
| Estimated annual cost (US 2025) & coverage | Not yet marketed; forecast ~$6,000–$9,000/year; coverage uncertain; may be restricted until long-term data mature | ~$12,000–14,000/year; coverage limited; higher denial rates than injectables; Medicare exclusion persists | ~$13,000–16,000/year; widely covered by commercial payers with PA; Medicare still excludes obesity drugs | ~$13,000–16,000/year; coverage expanding; prior authorization common; insurers favor due to high efficacy |
| References | [] [1] | [] [2] | [] [3] | [,] [4] [5] |
Limits of cross-trial comparisons
It is tempting to place orforglipron and oral semaglutide head-to-head and crown a "winner." Yet, the absence of direct comparison — particularly against injectable semaglutide (50 mg) [3] or tirzepatide [4, 5] (Table 1) — makes such judgments somehow premature. Different populations, designs, and co-interventions mean that any apparent differences in weight loss magnitude are suggestive but not definitive. For now, both agents should be viewed as part of a broader therapeutic class, with specific features that may suit different patient needs.
Safety: beyond the GI story
Gastrointestinal side effects remain the defining safety signal for GLP-1 therapies. These are well recognized, generally dose-dependent, and often improve with time or titration adjustments [14, 15]. Yet, other signals merit close scrutiny, including pancreatitis, tachycardia, and dysesthesia. Though only five cases were reported with orforglipron and all were mild [1], any association with pancreatitis requires careful monitoring given the longstanding debate around GLP-1 biology and pancreatic risk. The modest increase in heart rate observed with orforglipron echoes findings from injectable GLP-1 trials. While the clinical significance is uncertain, patients with underlying arrhythmias or cardiovascular disease warrant particular caution. The sensory symptoms reported in the OASIS-4 trial [2] are atypical for this drug class and highlight the importance of broad surveillance for unexpected effects.
Hence, enthusiasm should not eclipse vigilance. Post-marketing surveillance and mechanistic research will be critical to ensuring that early safety signals are either contextualized or confirmed.
Practical considerations in real-world use
Once these agents are available outside trial settings, several practical issues will determine their uptake and effectiveness:
Adherence: Daily oral dosing may improve acceptance for patients reluctant to use injections, but administration restrictions (as with oral semaglutide) could be a barrier.Durability: Evidence from injectables suggests sustained benefit, but long-term data for oral formulations are still limited.Patient Preference: Some patients who have successfully used injectables may prefer to continue them rather than switch. Others may embrace the pill form eagerly.Cost and Coverage: Payer policies will play a decisive role. If priced similarly to injectables, the convenience of oral dosing may not offset high out-of-pocket costs.Clinical Integration: These agents must be embedded in a framework of multidisciplinary care — including dietary, behavioral, and, when appropriate, surgical strategies [19, 20].
What comes next
Most likely, several unanswered questions will shape the trajectory of oral GLP-1 therapies, including: Can oral agents sustain weight loss and metabolic benefits over years, not just months? How do oral formulations compare directly against injectables semaglutide or tirzepatide in terms of efficacy, tolerability, and long-term outcomes? Will pancreatitis, heart rate increases, or other emergent signals prove clinically significant? Will pills meaningfully expand access for patients who currently forgo injectable therapy, or will cost remain the main bottleneck?
Conclusion: cautious optimism with a mandate for rigor
The ATTAIN-1 and OASIS-4 trials mark a milestone in obesity medicine: proof that oral GLP-1 receptor agonists can achieve double-digit weight loss and meaningful cardiometabolic improvements in adults with obesity, without diabetes. These agents are not merely "me-too" versions of their injectable predecessors; they represent a potentially transformative option for patients who have long sought an effective oral therapy.
Yet, the path forward demands rigor. Oral GLP-1 molecules must prove durable benefits, clarify safety signals, and establish their place relative to powerful injectable agents. Adherence, real-world persistence, and payer coverage will ultimately determine their impact more than trial averages.
If these challenges are met, oral GLP-1s could become a cornerstone of obesity management — not replacing injectables or surgery, but broadening the therapeutic spectrum. For a field long constrained by stigma, limited options, and therapeutic inertia, that possibility is as exciting as it is overdue.