Novo Nordisk says Wegovy pill outperforms Lilly’s oral GLP-1 in cross-trial comparison


Wegovy semaglutide tablets.

Michael Siluk | Universal Images Group | Getty Images

The Wegovy pill showed more pronounced weight loss and less cumbersome side effects than Eli Lilly‘s rival pill that was approved this week, Novo Nordisk said Thursday. 

Oral Wegovy demonstrated “significantly greater mean weight loss” than orforglipron, which Lilly will sell under the brand name Foundayo from next week, in an indirect study that compared the outcomes of other studies.

Novo’s findings evaluated previously published studies of the medicines and did not include any fresh data points. It will present further details of the study at the Obesity Medicine Association’s annual conference next week, the Danish drugmaker said.

A separate analysis suggested that 84% of patients favored a drug profile similar to that of semaglutide, the active ingredient in Wegovy and Ozempic, to that of Foundayo, Novo said. 

“These studies add to the growing body of evidence supporting the clinical strength of semaglutide and highlight attributes that patients value when choosing an obesity medicine that fits their lifestyle,” said newly-appointed Jamey Millar, executive vice president for U.S. operations. 

Efficacy versus ease

It comes as Novo and Lilly are both trying to shape the narrative of their respective pills, which is broadly considered to be the start of the next phase of the weight-loss drug era. The introduction of pills as an alternative to injections is expected to scale the market, as they are more easily distributed worldwide and favored by consumers. 

Eli Lilly CEO Dave Ricks told CNBC this week that Foundayo is more accessible and can more easily be fitted into daily routines. 

Foundayo can be taken without food restrictions, while the Wegovy pill needs to be taken first thing in the morning on an empty stomach with only a small amount of water, and patients must wait at least 30 minutes before eating. 

Novo Nordisk says Wegovy pill outperforms Lilly’s oral GLP-1 in cross-trial comparison

Novo CEO Mike Doustdar pushed back on the notion that those restrictions would limit uptake, telling CNBC in March that it was “absolutely not the case.”

“People are really interested because it’s the most efficacious pill right now in the market,” Doustdar added.

Earlier studies have shown that oral Wegovy results in an average of 16.6% weight loss, while Foundayo showed 12.4% on average among patients who stayed on the treatment. 

Since launching the Wegovy pill in the U.S. in early January, prescriptions have skyrocketed, and over 600,000 patients have since begun taking the pill. Analysts have described it as one of the best launches of a new medicine ever, with initial uptake quicker than injectable versions. 

However, following a strong launch, the number of patients being prescribed the starter dose seems to be flattening, Barclays analyst James Gordon said on Wednesday. 

“Slowing new starts, we believe could be the result of patient warehousing as physicians await LLY’s Foundayo (orforglipron) launch,” Gordon wrote in a note to clients.

Several analysts said that the trajectory of Foundayo’s prescriptions will be a key share price determinant over the next weeks and months. 

Expectations for 2026 Foundayo sales have come down meaningfully over the past month, from about $4 billion to $1.6 billion, said RBC Capital Markets analyst Trung Huynh on Wednesday. 

“Although there have been headwinds on pricing erosion in the GLP1 space, we believe there is substantial upside with the expected Medicare Part D expansion later this year,” noted Huynh. 

An RBC survey of nearly 200 patients, prescribers and payers in March indicated that Foundayo would be a preferred oral option amongst patients since it has no dosing restrictions.

The differentiation factor

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Novartis shells out  billion for immunology biotech Excellergy, in second multi-billion dollar deal in a week

Lilly shares have outperformed Novo’s American depositary receipts over the past year.

The market for obesity drugs might not be as large as previously expected, HSBC cautioned last month, as it recommended clients sell Lilly stock which has significantly outperformed Novo over the past 18 months. 

Expectations for Foundayo sales are overblown and likely to disappoint, the broker said.

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AstraZeneca stock jumps after surprise trial win for lung disease drug where rivals have failed


AstraZeneca‘s stock jumped nearly 5% after Britain’s most valuable company said its experimental lung disease medicine met its target in two late-stage clinical trials.

The respiratory treatment tozorakimab, reduced flare-ups of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in both former smokers and in the overall population versus placebo, the company said.

“This marks a notable shift in sentiment, given limited conviction in the IL-33 mechanism following prior IL-33 failures from Sanofi and Roche,” said Jefferies analysts.

Tozorakimab and rival drugs belong to a class of treatments called monoclonal antibodies. They work ​by suppressing the action ⁠of the protein interleukin-33 (IL-33) and can reduce inflammation.

“Today’s tozorakimab results deliver the first two confirmatory Phase III trials for an IL-33 biologic, which is a major scientific advancement in COPD, the world’s third leading cause of death,” said Sharon Barr, executive vice president of biopharmaceuticals and R&D at AstraZeneca.

“Tozorakimab works in a fundamentally different way from other biologics, inhibiting the signalling of the reduced and oxidised forms of IL-33 to both decrease inflammation and disrupt the cycle of mucus dysfunction that are key disease drivers in COPD,” Barr said.

The full results will be disclosed at an upcoming medical meeting, AstraZeneca said.

In July, Swiss drugmaker Roche reported mixed results for its COPD drug astegolimab, which ultimately failed to reduce flare-ups in a phase 3 study. Similar to tozorakimab, it is designed to stop the binding of IL-33.

Two months earlier, France’s Sanofi had reported similarly mixed results for its drug itepekimab which it is developing jointly with Regeneron.

AstraZeneca’s London-listed shares were last seen up 4.7% in midday trading, contrasting with the UK’s FTSE 100 index which fell 0.4%. Astra’s Friday update also lifted shares of Roche and Sanofi by around 1% each.

Multi-billion dollar potential

Nearly 400 million people are diagnosed with COPD, and it’s one of the leading causes of death worldwide, according to the World Health Organization.

It’s a progressive respiratory condition that manifests through breathlessness, chronic cough, and excess mucus production. Symptoms can worsen over time and contribute to ongoing inflammation and bronchoconstriction, making it difficult to breathe and increasing the risk of COPD exacerbations.

AstraZeneca has forecast tozorakimab peak annual sales of between $3 billion and $5 billion, whereas estimates on average put peak sales at about $1 billion prior to Friday’s trial results, according to FactSet.

The trial results showed a benefit for both former and current smokers, across all lung‑function severities.

It also indicated a benefit for patients with a low amount of a type of white blood cell called eosinophil, which is a key unmet need for about 35% of patients, Citi analysts noted.

Tozorakimab is also being studied in a Phase 3 trial for severe viral lower respiratory tract disease and in a Phase 2 trial in asthma.

Astra is planning to launch more than 20 new drugs over the next five years and has targeted $80 ⁠billion in annual sales by 2030.

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Novartis shells out $2 billion for immunology biotech Excellergy, in second multi-billion dollar deal in a week


A sign of Swiss pharmaceutical giant Novartis is seen on the top of a building at Novartis Campus in Basel, northern Switzerland, on Sept. 9, 2025.

Fabrice Coffrini | AFP | Getty Images

Novartis is planning to buy U.S.-based biotech Excellergy for up to $2 billion, betting on a next-generation allergy treatment that may prove to work faster and better than anything currently on the market, the Swiss pharmaceutical giant said Friday.

The acquisition will add Exl-111, an early-stage drug candidate, to Novartis’ existing allergy portfolio. It is the latest bolt-on deal in the company’s attempt to offset looming patent expirations.

It comes just a week after Novartis announced it is acquiring Synnovation subsidiary Pikavation Therapeutics for up to $3 billion to secure the rights to an experimental breast cancer drug. 

In February, the company completed the acquisition of Avidity Biosciences, adding three late-stage programs to its neuromuscular pipeline, with potential for several launches before 2030. 

Excellergy’s lead asset remains several years away from hitting the market. Novartis said it will pay the smaller biotech in both upfront and milestone payments, and the transaction is expected to close in the first half of 2026, subject to regulatory approvals.

Novartis stock traded sideways in morning trading in Zurich. Palo Alto-based Excellergy is privately held.

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Novartis shells out  billion for immunology biotech Excellergy, in second multi-billion dollar deal in a week

Shares of Novartis are up 33% over the past 12 months.

Many of the best-selling drugs in the world are facing a loss of exclusivity in key jurisdictions in what the sector calls “the patent cliff.” By the turn of the decade, companies risk losing hundreds of billions in revenue as branded drugs are exposed to generic competition.

Like the second half of 2025, early 2026 has seen a slew of M&A announcements from Big Pharma, including Merck announcing it has reached an agreement to buy Terns Pharmaceuticals for up to $6.7 billion earlier this week. Britain’s GSK and AstraZeneca are also among the companies that have announced several deals over the past months.

GSK’s global head of business development Chris Sheldon told CNBC late last year he is looking for acquisitions often in mid-stage development in the $1 billion to $2 billion range, where the biology is validated biology but the outcome of a drug candidate isn’t yet obvious. Like Novartis and AstraZeneca, GSK looks for so-called bolt-on deals that complement its portfolio and technology.

Novartis warned earlier this year that profits would decline in early 2026 as some of its best-selling drugs, including heart medicine Entresto face generic competition. Its second-best-selling medicine Cosentyx is expected to lose key exclusivities around 2029.

“For the first half of the year, we will have a tough prior year base with Entresto, Promacta and Tasigna generics having entered the U.S. market mid-2025,” said then-incoming CFO Mukul Mehta in a post-earnings call with analysts in February.

Novartis is seeing strong growth in other medicines such as cancer drug Kisqali and multiple sclerosis treatment Kesimpta, but still has to bulk up its pipeline to offset declines. 

CEO Vas Narasimhan has said that the company is in the middle of the biggest patent expiration wave in the company’s history.

“It’s $4 billion that we will absorb over the course of this year across the three medicines,” Narasimhan told CNCB in February.

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FDA approves higher dose version of weight loss drug Wegovy as Novo Nordisk tries to win back market share


The logo of pharmaceutical company Novo Nordisk is displayed in front of its offices in Bagsvaerd, Copenhagen, Denmark, Feb. 4, 2026.

Tom Little | Reuters

The Food and Drug Administration on Thursday approved a higher-dose version of Novo Nordisk‘s blockbuster weight loss injection Wegovy, as the company pushes to win back market share from chief rival Eli Lilly.

Novo expects to launch the higher, 7.2-milligram dose of Wegovy in April. The Danish drugmaker is positioning that version to better compete with Lilly’s obesity drug Zepbound, which has proven to be more effective at promoting weight loss than the standard, 2.4-milligram dose of Wegovy.

That higher efficacy has helped Zepbound become the preferred obesity medication among prescribers and patients, even though it entered the U.S. market later than Wegovy, and has solidified Lilly’s position as the dominant player in the space.

The high-dose Wegovy helped patients with obesity lose an average 20.7% of their weight after 72 weeks in a phase three trial. The standard dose of Wegovy has shown around 15% weight loss on average in clinical trials.

More CNBC health coverage

“I think it really makes it more competitive, and it really reduces the delta there,” Dr. Jason Brett, principal U.S. medical head at Novo Nordisk, said in an interview Thursday ahead of the approval.

“But even more importantly, I think it just gives patients another option if they’re not reaching their targets, and achieving some of these higher weight losses for certain patients,” he added.

In a separate phase three trial on patients with obesity and Type 2 diabetes, high-dose Wegovy demonstrated an average weight loss of 14.1%. People with diabetes typically have a harder time losing weight than people without the condition.

It marks the first approval of a GLP-1 treatment under the FDA’s new national priority voucher plan that aims to cut drug review times to one to two months for companies the agency says are supporting U.S. national health priorities. The FDA launched the pilot plan in June.

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Zealand’s stock falls 35% after disappointing drug result. Its CEO tells CNBC people need to focus less on the ‘weight loss Olympics’


Wegovy is produced by pharmaceutical company Novo Nordisk and has been approved for specifically for chronic weight management in adults and adolescents. (Photo by Steve Christo – Corbis/Corbis via Getty Images)

Steve Christo – Corbis | Corbis News | Getty Images

The chief executive of drugmaker Zealand Pharma sought to calm investors about the latest trial results, which showed patients lost less weight than expected and prompted the stock to fall more than 35%.

Speaking to CNBC, CEO Adam Steensberg criticized what he called the “weight loss Olympics,” where markets and companies focus too heavily on the amount of weight lost, rather than on factors such as staying on the medicine long-term and dealing with side effects.

The world doesn’t need these products that amount to very high rates of weight loss, he said, referring to medicines developed by Novo Nordisk and Eli Lilly. The latest trial had also not been optimized for maximum weight loss, he added.

“I need to focus on what the patients need, not what the current market like to see,” Steensberg said. “We have for a long time called to end the weight loss Olympics.”

Zealand is developing the drug petrelintide in partnership with Swiss pharma heavyweight Roche. Mid-stage trial results released after the closing bell on Thursday showed the drug led to an average weight reduction of 10.7% over 42 weeks. Analysts had largely expected between 13% and 20% weight loss.

Shares of Zealand were last seen trading 35% lower, on track for their worst day ever and the lowest close since August 2023. Shares of Roche fell 3%.

Zealand’s stock falls 35% after disappointing drug result. Its CEO tells CNBC people need to focus less on the ‘weight loss Olympics’

Addressing weight maintenance, rather than losing the most amount of weight quickly, has emerged as a way for companies to differentiate themselves as they try to enter the lucrative weight-loss drug market, which has been estimated to be worth as much as $150 billion by 2030.

Steensberg said he was “extremely certain” there would be a shift in the industry “towards tolerability,” referring to how well patients can cope with side effects of the medications.

“I think very, very soon, people start to realize that it’s not about that weight loss number, it’s about how you achieve that weight loss number.”

“If you then look into real world, you will actually discover that most patients who are on treatment today with the current products never get to those numbers that we see in clinical studies,” because “in a real-world setting, people cannot tolerate it,” he said, referring to Novo Nordisk’s and Eli Lilly’s drugs already on the market.

Petrelintide is an amylin analog that targets a hormone produced in the pancreas that affects appetite and slows gastric emptying, rather than the GLP-1 or GIP gut hormones targeted by weight-loss treatments currently on the market, such as Novo’s Wegovy and Lilly’s Zepbound.

A majority of patients on Novo’s Wegovy experience some form of side effects, most commonly gastrointestinal, such as nausea, diarrhea, and vomiting. Most are mild to moderate and transient. The trend is similar for Lilly’s Zepbound.

A Novo spokesperson said that direct comparisons between trials are challenging because of variations in study design and reporting practices. A study of a high-dose semaglutide, the active ingredient in Wegovy and Ozempic, found that patients lost up to 21% of their weight, with only 5.4% ending the treatment due to side effects, the spokesperson said. Only 3.3% discontinued the treatment due to gastrointestinal side effects.

Lilly didn’t respond to a CNBC request for comment.

In the trial results, Zealand said that at the maximum dose of petrelintide, there were “no cases of vomiting and no treatment discontinuations due to gastrointestinal adverse events.” The trial involved 493 people living with overweight and obesity.

It also has a drug under development that combines petrelintide with the Roche-developed CT-388, a GLP-1/GIP receptor, which Zealand says may be a better option for patients needing to lose a large amount of weight.

Real-world potential

One study of more than 125,000 patients suggested that about 50% of people with obesity discontinue appetite-modifying GLP-1 medications within a year. High costs and side effects are common reasons for stopping.

A study published in the British Medical Journal in January found that people who lost weight with the help of GLP-1 drugs, regained weight significantly faster after stopping than those who lost weight with diet and exercise.

Obese patients who stopped GLP-1 medications were projected to return to their starting weight after 1.7 years, the study found, compared with 3.9 years for those who lost weight with behavioral change alone.

The rate at which patients lose weight on drugs has been a key factor driving stock prices for Novo and Lilly in recent years.

Novo shares are trading 75% below their peak in mid-2024, while Lilly shares have risen over the same period as its medicines were shown to deliver a higher rate of weight loss.

The rise of obesity pills

On Friday, Jefferies analysts said petrelintide had potential for Wegovy-like efficacy and tolerability on par with placebo which “suggests this is a viable drug.”

But they added it was likely to be viewed as a second-best to the amylin treatment being developed by Lilly.

“For us as a small company, to be among the leading products in a new category… is a very nice place to be,” said Steensberg, adding that it was early to make such calls.

“If you look historically at the markets, if you’re among the three first who launch into a new category with an attractive profile, you will become a very significant player in that category.”

He added that the latest trial hadn’t been optimized to maximize weight loss, as it had an almost 50/50 gender distribution, and that women tend to lose more weight than men.

“Most companies would approach that with 70% females,” he said, adding he was “confident” petrelintide would lead to a weight loss in the mid-teens once they have optimized starting conditions.

The trial results published Thursday were about “finding the doses and then demonstrating the safety and solid ability,” he said.

Zealand said it expected to initiate a Phase 3 study later this year. But Barclays analysts said that the market was unlikely to credit a Phase 3 “fix” for petrelintide in two years.


Why Novo Nordisk’s Ireland expansion is key to fighting off Eli Lilly


Novo Nordisk is investing 432 million euros ($506 million) in a facility in Ireland as it expands its production capacities to make the newly launched Wegovy pill, the Danish drugmaker said Monday.

The news comes about two months after Novo launched its blockbuster weight loss drug Wegovy in pill form in the U.S. market, in what has been described as one of the strongest launches ever. 

“With the investment in the Athlone facility, Novo Nordisk is expanding its production capacities for oral products, which will strengthen our ability to meet both current and future demand, outside the US,” said Kasper Bødker Mejlvang, Novo’s executive vice president of chemistry, manufacturing and controls and product supply.

It follows Novo Nordisk losing market share to Eli Lilly, and investors doubting that its pipeline holds enough promise to win it back. The stock has tumbled as a result, and currently trades at roughly a quarter of what it did at its peak in mid-2024.

“The investment is a sign of increasing focus and bet on the oral space from Novo Nordisk – an area where Novo has an edge,” Jyske Bank analyst Henrik Hallengreen Laustsen told CNBC Monday.

Ensuring Wegovy supply

Novo enjoyed a first-mover advantage in the anti-obesity market and launched its GLP-1 drug semaglutide, sold as Ozempic and Wegovy, years before Lilly’s rival medicine. 

It did, however, misjudge the demand for its weight loss jabs. With semaglutide in short supply, compounding pharmacies were allowed to flourish through a loophole in U.S. regulations, which allows the legal making of patented drugs during a shortage. 

Supply issues have since been resolved as Novo ramped up manufacturing capacity. Even so, compunders continue to sell cheaper copycat versions of the drug, and it is still weighing on Novo’s sales. The company is involved in multiple legal battles over intellectual property.

Novo has repeatedly said it has enough supply of the Wegovy pill to meet demand in the U.S., the only market where it has launched so far.

Even with the new Ireland investment, Sydbank analyst Søren Løntoft Hansen says it will be a challenge for Novo to meet demand for the pill globally.

Novo’s announcement Monday about expanding manufacturing capacity reflects a desire to launch the pill in other countries, Hansen said. It is currently under review by the European Medicines Agency, and a potential approval is expected by year-end.

“It also reflects the very successful launch in the U.S., which is actually also perhaps the best launch of a drug ever,” Hansen told CNBC.

According to Barclays analysts who closely track Wegovy’s uptake, U.S. Wegovy pill prescriptions are outpacing the early rollouts of existing GLP-1 injections. Novo CEO Mike Doudstar told CNBC in mid-February that 246,000 patients were taking oral Wegovy. 

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Novartis shells out  billion for immunology biotech Excellergy, in second multi-billion dollar deal in a week

Novo Nordisk shares are trailing Eli Lilly’s.

Novo shares were down about 1.2% Monday, notching a fresh 52-week low.

“It seems like from the share price reaction that it is a drop in the ocean, but I actually think this signals a belief in this Wegovy pill and that, capacity-wise, they need more [to meet] possible future demand outside the U.S.,” said Hansen.

“If we were about to throw in the towel we would not be investing in factories in Ireland,” CEO Mike Doustdar said in February, according to a Bloomberg report.

The market is likely waiting for Lilly to launch its rival weight loss pill orforglipron in the second quarter of this year before making a call on Wegovy pill’s future prospects.

The construction projects in Ireland have already begun and will be finalized gradually throughout 2027 and 2028, Novo said. It will involve both capacity expansion and technological upgrades of existing facilities. 

According to Laustsen, the site is likely to focus on oral zenagamtide and amycretin, both experimental drugs developed by Novo. “An expected launch in 2029 and fits well with Novo’s strategic element of increasing focus on oral opportunities in the obesity market,” he said.


These 4 charts show the scale of Novo Nordisk’s woes


Novo Nordisk was the first company to make a GLP-1 drug for weight loss and became Europe’s most valuable company.

But its troubles are stacking up and today the stock trades at just a quarter of what it did at its peak less than two years ago.

Pricing pressure, fierce competition, and pipeline setbacks have all hit the Danish drugmaker in recent months.

Despite being first to launch a GLP-1 drug for weight loss, Novo’s market share has eroded, and the company now only captures about 40% of the market, while rival Eli Lilly holds 60%, according to most estimates.

Novo is clear-eyed about the challenges it faces, especially around pricing. After the company pre-released its 2026 forecast earlier this month and predicted declining sales, CEO Mike Doustdar told CNBC: “People should expect that it goes down before it comes back up.”

He’s repeatedly said that new medicines, the Wegovy pill, and increased volumes will drive long-term growth.

These charts show the scale of the challenges Novo is facing.

Novo Nordisk is often referred to as a diabetes and obesity pure play. Its portfolio included six branded drugs with annual sales of at least $1 billion in 2025, fewer than comparable current and future rivals.

Eli Lilly boasts eight so-called blockbuster drugs, and its portfolio also includes oncology and gene therapies.

The combined sales of Ozempic and Wegovy, Novo’s two biggest drugs, amounted to about $32 billion, or about 67% of total sales, last year. Combined sales of Lilly’s two biggest drugs, Mounjaro and Zepbound, were about $37 billion, or about 56% of the company’s total sales over the same period.

Novo also sells insulin, including blockbusters Tresiba and NovoRapid, as well as some drugs for rare diseases like hemophilia, but none come close to bringing in what its GLP-1 drugs do.

Among large-cap pharma companies hoping to enter the market for weight loss drugs in the coming years, such as AstraZeneca, Roche, Amgen, and Pfizer, through its acquisition of Metsera, the number of blockbuster drugs was significantly higher.

Novo Nordisk has also come under pressure as prices for GLP-1 drugs are coming down in its most important market, the U.S.

The U.S. has accounted for more than half of Novo’s total sales since 2023, and falling prices there are weighing on both the company’s topline and profitability. Last year, Novo and Lilly reached a deal with the Trump administration to lower prices on their GLP-1 drugs on Medicare and Medicaid and offer the treatments directly to consumers at a discount.

“In 2026, Novo Nordisk will face pricing headwinds in an increasingly competitive market,” said CEO Mike Doustdar, as the company’s full-year earnings report was published earlier this month.

Novo stock is down 75% since peaking at just over 1,000 Danish kroner a share in mid-2024.

The stock is up a little over 10% over the last five years. That compares to Eli Lilly’s 400% rise and the European blue-chip index Stoxx 600‘s 55% gain over the same period.

Investors were last rattled on Monday when Novo reported disappointing results of a trial pitting its next-generation weight loss drug, CagriSema, against Eli Lilly’s tirzepatide, also known as Zepbound, sending the stock down over 16% on the day.

“Confidence in the share is at rock bottom,” said Jyske Bank analyst Henrik Hallengreen Laustsen on Tuesday.

Earlier this month, Novo Nordisk said it expected sales and profits to drop by between 5% and 13% in 2026. If that comes to be true, it would be the first time annual sales have declined since 2017, in local currencies.

Analysts surveyed by FactSet expect sales to come in about 8% lower in 2026 compared to 2025. Much of that is due to increasing competition from both Eli Lilly and compounding pharmacies that are selling copycat versions of Novo’s branded drugs for a lower price.

Longer term, other large-cap pharma companies are planning to enter the market, and are pitching investors more differentiated weight loss drugs to be able to secure a slice of the market share for themselves.

Novo is hoping CagriSema can beef up future sales, but after the latest trial results, analysts are increasingly doubting its commercial potential.

Novo said it is optimistic about the drug, and that further trials would assess its full weight-loss potential.

The Wegovy pill is another potential growth driver for Novo and had a strong launch. However, it remains to be seen how it will fare if Lilly launches its rival pill, expected to hit the market in the second quarter, and what effects lower prices might have on volumes.


Novo Nordisk trial ‘own goal’ sparks flurry of analyst downgrades



Novo Nordisk sinks 10% after weight loss drug fails to match Eli Lilly’s in trial


Novo Nordisk stock fell over 10% Monday after it said its next-generation weight loss drug didn’t meet its primary target.

The drug, CagriSema, didn’t achieve its primary endpoint of demonstrating non-inferiority on weight loss when compared to Eli Lilly‘s rival drug tirzepatide after 84 weeks, Novo said in a statement Monday morning.

Eli Lilly‘s stock rose 2.1% in premarket trading.

Novo is exploring additional trials to test CagriSema, including higher-dose combinations, it said.

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