Can Retatrutide Help Fight Pancreatic Cancer? New Research Shows Tumor Reduction Without Weight Loss

Study Overview

Researchers tested whether low-dose Retatrutide (Reta) (a triple incretin agonist) could slow cancer growth independent of weight loss, using a mouse model of pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC) in diet-induced obese mice.

Experimental Setup

Mice were implanted with pancreatic tumor cells and split into four treatment groups:

  • Vehicle control (no treatment)
  • Low-dose Reta (1 nmol/kg, subcutaneously)
  • Anti-PD-1 immunotherapy (10 mg/kg, intraperitoneally)
  • Combination Reta + anti-PD-1

Treatments were given once every three days for two weeks after tumors were established.

Tumor Growth Results

Low-dose Reta reduced tumor volume by ~3-fold compared with control mice.

Anti-PD-1 therapy reduced tumors by ~5-fold.

The combination of Reta + anti-PD-1 showed about a 4-fold reduction, but did not significantly outperform either treatment alone.

Weight & Metabolic Findings

Mouse body weight remained stable across groups during treatment — meaning the anti-tumor effects were not driven by weight loss.

Blood glucose was significantly lower in Reta-treated mice, suggesting engagement of metabolic pathways.

Implications & Mechanisms

The fact that Reta slowed tumor growth without causing weight loss suggests it may act through:

Direct effects on tumor cells and/orModulation of immune responses or metabolism inside the tumor microenvironment.

The researchers measured immune cells in the spleen at the end of the study, indicating they were exploring potential immunological mechanisms, though details were not in the abstract.

Conclusions

Retatrutide at low, non-weight-loss doses had anti-cancer activity comparable to anti-PD-1 therapy in this mouse model of pancreatic cancer.

Combination therapy didn’t clearly add benefit over either treatment alone.

These results suggest retatrutide could be explored as a novel anti-tumor treatment, especially for obesity-associated cancers, potentially through metabolic or immune pathways beyond its weight-loss effects.

For more information on the clinical study – Click Here

Table of Contents

What is NAD+?

Key Points: Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) is found in every cell, serving as an essential cofactor — the compounds necessary

Read More »