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Tirzepatide

The first dual-action GIP/GLP-1 receptor agonist. Mounjaro for diabetes, Zepbound for weight loss — and weight loss numbers that have rewritten expectations for what a drug can do. Here is what the data actually supports.

What Is Tirzepatide?

Tirzepatide is a dual GIP/GLP-1 receptor agonist — the first in its class. Unlike semaglutide, which only targets the GLP-1 receptor, tirzepatide activates both the glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) receptor and the GLP-1 receptor simultaneously.

Developed by Eli Lilly, it was approved as Mounjaro for type 2 diabetes in 2022 and as Zepbound for chronic weight management in 2023. It is administered as a once-weekly subcutaneous injection, like semaglutide.

The dual-receptor approach is what makes tirzepatide genuinely different — not just "another GLP-1." GIP and GLP-1 are both incretin hormones released by your gut after eating, but they work through different pathways. Hitting both receptors appears to produce more weight loss and comparable or better glucose control than GLP-1 alone.

Why two receptors matter — in plain English

Think of GLP-1 and GIP as two different appetite and metabolism levers. Semaglutide pulls one lever. Tirzepatide pulls both. GLP-1 primarily works through appetite suppression and slowed gastric emptying. GIP adds effects on fat tissue metabolism, nutrient sensing, and potentially improved insulin sensitivity through a different cellular pathway.

The result in trials: more weight loss, and the additional GIP activity may help explain why some patients tolerate tirzepatide differently than pure GLP-1 drugs. But "dual mechanism" does not automatically mean "twice as good" — biology is not that simple.

What the Internet Claims

Tirzepatide hit the market in the middle of the GLP-1 media frenzy. The hype machine was already warmed up from semaglutide, and the bigger weight loss numbers gave it even more fuel.

xIt is the "Ozempic killer" — makes semaglutide completely obsolete
xYou are guaranteed to lose 25%+ of your body weight
xIt has far fewer side effects than semaglutide
xThe dual mechanism makes it fundamentally superior to any single-receptor drug
xOne injection fixes everything — weight, diabetes, heart disease, all of it

What the Research Actually Says

Weight Loss Efficacy — The SURMOUNT Trials

The SURMOUNT trial program is to tirzepatide what the STEP program was to semaglutide — large, rigorous, randomized controlled trials that established the clinical evidence base.

SURMOUNT-1 (Jastreboff et al., 2022, NEJM)
  • 2,539 adults with BMI of 30+ (or 27+ with at least one weight-related condition), no diabetes
  • Three dose arms: 5mg, 10mg, and 15mg weekly vs placebo, all with lifestyle intervention
  • Results at 72 weeks: -15.0% (5mg), -19.5% (10mg), -22.5% (15mg) vs -3.1% placebo
  • At the 15mg dose, over one-third of participants lost more than 25% of their body weight
  • These are the largest weight loss numbers ever recorded in an obesity drug trial
SURMOUNT-2 (Garvey et al., 2023, Lancet)
  • 938 adults with type 2 diabetes and BMI 27+
  • Results: -12.8% (10mg) and -14.7% (15mg) vs -3.2% placebo at 72 weeks
  • Weight loss is lower in people with diabetes — this is consistent across all weight loss drugs, not unique to tirzepatide
The Cross-Trial Comparison Trap

You cannot reliably compare SURMOUNT numbers to STEP numbers.

The "tirzepatide produces 50% more weight loss than semaglutide" claim comes from comparing across different trials with different patient populations, different durations, and different lifestyle intervention protocols. This is a well-known statistical error called indirect comparison.

As of mid-2026, no large, published head-to-head randomized trial directly comparing semaglutide 2.4mg vs tirzepatide 15mg exists. Until that data arrives, claiming one is definitively "better" than the other is getting ahead of the science. The SURPASS-2 trial compared tirzepatide to semaglutide 1mg (the diabetes dose, not the weight loss dose) — this is not a fair weight-loss comparison.

GI Side Effects — Similar, Not Better

One of the most persistent claims about tirzepatide is that it has "fewer side effects than Ozempic." The data tells a more nuanced story:

24-33%
Nausea

Dose-dependent. Lower end at 5mg, higher at 15mg. Comparable to semaglutide at equivalent titration stages.

17-23%
Diarrhea

Similar range across dose levels. Tends to be mild to moderate and improves over time.

6-13%
Vomiting

Lower than semaglutide's 24% in STEP 1, but different trial designs make direct comparison imprecise.

About 4-7% of SURMOUNT-1 participants discontinued due to adverse events — in the same range as semaglutide trials. The GI profile is similar, not dramatically better. Individual tolerance varies enormously — some people tolerate tirzepatide well who struggled with semaglutide, and vice versa.

Diabetes Efficacy — The SURPASS Trials

The SURPASS trial program established tirzepatide for type 2 diabetes management:

  • SURPASS-1 through SURPASS-5 demonstrated HbA1c reductions of 1.87-2.59% across doses — meeting or exceeding all active comparators including insulin and semaglutide 1mg
  • SURPASS-2 specifically compared tirzepatide to semaglutide 1mg (diabetes dose) and showed superior HbA1c reduction and weight loss. But remember: 1mg is not the 2.4mg weight-loss dose
  • Glucose control improvements were clinically meaningful across all doses, with the highest response at 15mg
Cardiovascular Outcomes — Still Collecting

This is a critical gap in the tirzepatide evidence base. Semaglutide has the SELECT trial showing a 20% reduction in major cardiovascular events. Tirzepatide does not yet have an equivalent published outcome trial.

The SURPASS-CVOT trial is underway and will provide dedicated cardiovascular outcomes data. Until results are published, the cardiovascular benefit of tirzepatide is inferred from metabolic improvements (weight loss, glucose control, lipid changes) — not proven by a dedicated outcomes trial.

This does not mean tirzepatide is cardiovascularly unsafe — it means the evidence is not yet at the same level as semaglutide. For patients whose primary concern is cardiovascular risk reduction, semaglutide currently has stronger evidence.

Muscle Preservation — Potentially Better, Needs Confirmation

Early body composition data from SURMOUNT trials suggests that tirzepatide may preserve a higher proportion of lean mass compared to weight lost — meaning a greater fraction of the weight loss is fat, not muscle.

This is biologically plausible: GIP receptors are expressed on adipose tissue and may preferentially mobilize fat stores. However, dedicated body composition sub-studies with DEXA confirmation are still being analyzed. As with semaglutide, resistance training remains the most reliable way to preserve muscle on any rapid weight loss program.

The Bottom Line

The weight loss numbers from SURMOUNT-1 are genuinely unprecedented: 22.5% average body weight reduction at the highest dose, with over a third of participants exceeding 25%. The dual GIP/GLP-1 mechanism is a real pharmacological innovation, not marketing spin.

But "Ozempic killer" is a headline, not science. There is no published head-to-head trial at full weight-loss doses. GI side effects are similar, not dramatically better. Cardiovascular outcomes data is still being collected. And the 22.5% average means some people lost more and some lost significantly less — averages are not guarantees.

Tirzepatide is a genuinely impressive drug with a novel mechanism. For some people, it will work better than semaglutide. For others, the reverse will be true. The only way to know which camp you fall into is to track your own response — your weight, your side effects, your body composition, your bloodwork. That is exactly what Dosi is built for.

Key Studies

SURMOUNT-1
Tirzepatide Once Weekly for the Treatment of Obesity
Jastreboff AM, Aronne LJ, Ahmad NN, et al.
N Engl J Med. 2022;387(3):205-216
The landmark trial. 2,539 adults without diabetes, 72 weeks. 22.5% weight loss at 15mg vs 3.1% placebo.
SURMOUNT-2
Tirzepatide Once Weekly for the Treatment of Obesity in People with Type 2 Diabetes
Garvey WT, Frias JP, Jastreboff AM, et al.
Lancet. 2023;402(10402):613-626
938 adults with T2D. 14.7% weight loss at 15mg. Confirms lower weight loss in diabetic populations.
SURPASS-2
Tirzepatide versus Semaglutide Once Weekly in Patients with Type 2 Diabetes
Frias JP, Davies MJ, Rosenstock J, et al.
N Engl J Med. 2021;385(6):503-515
Compared tirzepatide to semaglutide 1mg (diabetes dose). Tirzepatide showed superior HbA1c and weight reductions. Not a weight-loss dose comparison.
SURPASS-1
Efficacy and Safety of a Novel Dual GIP and GLP-1 Receptor Agonist Tirzepatide
Rosenstock J, Wysham C, Frias JP, et al.
Lancet. 2021;398(10295):143-155
First SURPASS trial. Established tirzepatide's diabetes efficacy across 5mg, 10mg, and 15mg doses.

Common Dosing

Tirzepatide uses a monthly titration schedule — each dose is maintained for 4 weeks before the next increase. The schedule is more gradual than semaglutide, with six dose levels rather than five.

2.5 mg
Initiation
Weeks 1-4
Starting dose. Sub-therapeutic for weight loss — lets your body adapt to dual receptor activation
5.0 mg
Titration
Weeks 5-8
First potentially therapeutic dose. Some patients begin noticing appetite changes here
7.5 mg
Titration
Weeks 9-12
Intermediate step. Many prescribers assess tolerability here before continuing up
10.0 mg
Titration
Weeks 13-16
Mid-range dose. SURMOUNT-1 showed -19.5% weight loss at this level
12.5 mg
Titration
Weeks 17-20
Intermediate step to the maximum dose. Helps reduce GI side effect spikes
15.0 mg
Maintenance
Week 21+
Maximum dose used in SURMOUNT trials. Highest efficacy but also highest side effect rates
Injection Details
  • Route: Subcutaneous injection (belly, thigh, or upper arm)
  • Frequency: Once weekly, same day each week
  • Timing: Any time of day, with or without food
  • Site rotation: Rotate injection sites to avoid tissue changes. Dosi's body map tracks this automatically.

What to Track

The tracking priorities for tirzepatide are similar to semaglutide — with a few additions that matter if you are switching between the two or comparing your response.

Weight

Weekly, same conditions. The trend over weeks matters more than any single weigh-in.

Body composition

Monthly DEXA or bioimpedance. Especially important given the potential lean-mass preservation advantage — track it, don't assume it.

GI symptoms

Daily during titration. Log severity of nausea, diarrhea, vomiting, constipation. Compare across dose levels to find your tolerability ceiling.

Energy and mood

Brief daily log. Note any changes from baseline, especially during dose increases.

Blood glucose / HbA1c

Fasting glucose weekly if you have a meter. HbA1c every 3 months via lab work. Essential if you have T2D or prediabetes.

Injection sites

Log location each week. Rotate belly, thigh, arm. Track any site reactions or bruising.

Food intake changes

Note reduced cravings, portion changes, food aversions. Many patients report specific taste and appetite shifts.

Comparative metrics (if switching)

If you previously used semaglutide, log the same metrics consistently so you can compare your personal response across drugs.

View full clinical profile →

Track your tirzepatide protocol.

Log doses, side effects, injection sites, and body composition. Your data will tell you how tirzepatide works for your body — not how it worked in a trial average.

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