Eloralintide... anyone else impatient?

ReconFree

Well-known member
I'm a total newbie to this but ready to dive in headfirst! Sema and tirz made me feel super blah and anxious, but reta was ok. Still want more appetite suppression, though. Just grabbed some cagri, but I'm drooling over eloralintide! Is it too much to ask for cutting-edge peptides NOW?!?
 
Why not give the cagri a shot first? I'm loving it at 0.25mg. Isn't eloralintide still super early in development? I'm curious why you're so set on that one.
 
Actually, the Phase II trial results came out during Obesity Week. That's why there is so much buzz. Phase III is planned to kick off before 2026. Since reta has been available in the grey market after its Phase II data release, I imagine we'll see eloralintide soon, too, given the encouraging data.
 
I heard they're researching it with Tirzepatide, too. I wonder if it needs a certain pH situation like cagrilintide, so it'll be interesting to see how that plays out.
 
Right? I'm shocked we haven't seen it for sale yet. The process to make it must be really hard to figure out or too expensive to copy.
 
I think I saw the details of the sequence had been published. I heard that it isn't that complicated, but I am no expert.
 
Isn't that some chemical thing, like a blueprint for making it? Maybe the configuration makes it harder to create? I think Cys is 'cystein', an amino acid?? I'm no chemist, though ;-)
 
Eloralintide has finished at least one phase 2 research trial. At least one additional phase two trial is still ongoing. Yes, eloralintide is further behind in development as compared to reta, and far behind tirzepatide. Still much work has been done on developing it.
 
Since generic tirz and reta are so common, the brand name companies have probably spent a lot of time trying to make sure it's hard to duplicate the elora peptide. You can't legally hide technical details in a patent application. But you can strategically write it so others can't easily copy it. They didn't do that with Tirz or Reta, so I wonder what they will do with Elora?

They can do this by claiming different types of sequences, rather than specific ones. They could also include a key step that they never reveal. They could also share one working recipe, but not the best one.

I used to work with patents so I know a little about this. This is just my guess. I hope the generic versions are safe!
 
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