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Amgen says MariTide helped trial patients maintain weight loss

By Thomson Reuters Jan 12, 2026 | 6:42 PM

By Michael Erman and Deena Beasley

SAN FRANCISCO, Jan 12 (Reuters) – An extension study of Amgen’s experimental obesity drug MariTide found that it helped people maintain weight loss while a second mid-stage trial in diabetes patients showed ‍that it lowered their blood sugar and weight, the company said on Monday.

The findings were announced by CEO Bob Bradway in a presentation at the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco.

Amgen said in June that MariTide helped overweight or obese patients shed up to 20% of their body weight in its 52-week Phase 2 study. Most patients, however, ‌experienced gastrointestinal side effects like vomiting and the company said ‌future trials would start with a much lower dose that would increase over time.

In the second part of the Phase 2 trial – aimed at assessing the drug’s potential as a maintenance therapy – patients who achieved 15% or more weight loss were re-randomized to receive ​different doses of MariTide or a placebo for another 52 weeks.

Amgen said a “large majority” of those patients given a lower monthly dose or a quarterly dose of ‍the drug maintained weight loss achieved in the ​first part of the study.

The second year of MariTide treatment ​was very well tolerated including at quarterly doses, with a low incidence of nausea and ‍vomiting and no new safety signals observed, the company said.

“Other people are clamoring to develop once-monthly or less frequent dose medicines, and we are unambiguously in the lead there,” Jay Bradner, Amgen’s head of research and development, told Reuters on Monday.

Current popular weight-loss drugs like Eli Lilly’s Zepbound and Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy are ‍weekly injections.

Amgen also said a 24-week study of monthly MariTide in people living with Type 2 diabetes who are overweight or with obesity showed robust and clinically meaningful reduction ‍in both HbA1c, a measure ‍of blood sugar, and weight.

Wegovy targets receptors for the ​appetite- and blood-sugar-reducing hormone known as GLP-1, while Zepbound stimulates ​GLP-1 and ⁠a second gut hormone called GIP.

Amgen’s MariTide takes a different ‌approach. It is an antibody linked to a pair of peptides that activates the GLP-1 receptor while simultaneously blocking the GIP receptor.

Amgen is currently conducting several Phase 3 trials of MariTide, including a 72-week study testing three different doses in obese or overweight adults.

(Reporting by Deena Beasley in Los Angeles and Michael Erman in San Francisco; Editing by Bill ⁠Berkrot and Matthew Lewis)