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Retatrutide Research Guide

The triple-agonist making waves in weight loss research — clinical trial results, mechanism, and what's coming next.

Retatrutide

Retatrutide (LY3437943) is an investigational peptide developed by Eli Lilly that simultaneously activates three receptors: GLP-1, GIP, and glucagon. Phase 2 trial data showed up to 24% body weight reduction over 48 weeks — making it potentially the most powerful weight loss drug ever tested. Here is everything known about its current status, science, and availability.


⚖️ Legal & Regulatory Status

Last updated: April 15, 2026

FDA Status
Phase 2 Clinical Trials
Weight Loss
Up to 24% in trials
Approved Use
Not yet approved
Availability
Research only

Retatrutide is not FDA-approved and is not legally available for prescription in the United States as of April 2026. It is currently in Phase 3 clinical trials conducted by Eli Lilly.

Current status summary:

Patent situation: Retatrutide is covered by Eli Lilly's patents. This means even after FDA approval, compounding pharmacy access will not be available unless Lilly faces an official shortage designation — which is how semaglutide/tirzepatide compounding was triggered. This is an important distinction from peptides like BPC-157.


🔬 What the Research Says

Last updated: April 15, 2026

Retatrutide is the most clinically studied of the next-generation weight loss peptides. Unlike semaglutide (GLP-1 only) or tirzepatide (GLP-1 + GIP), retatrutide adds glucagon receptor agonism, which increases energy expenditure on top of appetite suppression.

Phase 2 trial results (published in NEJM, 2023):

Mechanism: The triple-agonist approach is significant because glucagon receptor activation increases basal metabolic rate, meaning the body burns more calories at rest — something pure GLP-1 agonists don't do. This may explain the superior weight loss numbers.

Phase 3 trials: Multiple Phase 3 studies are underway as of 2026, examining weight loss, cardiovascular outcomes, and type 2 diabetes management. Results expected 2026–2027.

Key paper: Jastreboff AM et al. "Triple–Hormone-Receptor Agonist Retatrutide for Obesity." NEJM 2023. Available free via PubMed Central.


💬 Community Interest

Last updated: April 15, 2026

Retatrutide generates enormous interest across weight loss, fitness, and biohacking communities. After the Phase 2 data dropped in 2023, it became the most anticipated drug in the obesity space. People who have been on semaglutide or tirzepatide are closely watching its progress as a potential step-up option.

The main community conversations: when will it be approved, what will it cost, will insurance cover it, and whether the gray-market versions being sold online are legitimate (general consensus: extreme caution warranted, as counterfeit GLP-1 peptides have been documented).

There is also significant discussion among clinics and functional medicine practitioners about how to position retatrutide relative to tirzepatide once it gets approved.


📅 Timeline of Changes

Last updated: April 15, 2026


📄 Download Research Brief

Get a comprehensive, printable breakdown of all retatrutide clinical trial data, mechanism of action, comparison to semaglutide and tirzepatide, and expected approval timeline — formatted to share with your doctor or clinic.

Deep-dive research brief available

10 pages covering mechanism of action, research findings, dosing protocols, and safety profile.

Retatrutide Research Brief $9

Updated as Phase 3 data and FDA submissions are published. Purchase once, re-download free forever.


PeptideWatch monitors clinical trial registries, FDA announcements, and medical journals daily. This page updates automatically when new information is available. Subscribe to our newsletter to get notified of major developments.