(Reuters) -Eli Lilly said on Sunday its drug Zepbound was superior to Novo Nordisk’s Wegovy across five weight-loss targets such as reducing waist circumference, citing data from a head-to-head trial.
The data is the first head-to-head trial comparing the wildly popular medicines, and gives Lilly more firepower as it seeks to gain wider insurance coverage in an obesity drug market estimated to reach more than $150 billion annually by the next decade.
Zepbound helped nearly 25% more participants lose more than 15% of their weight compared to Wegovy, Lilly said on Sunday.
The trial also showed that treatment with Zepbound achieved a superior average waist circumference reduction of 18.4 centimeters (cm), while those treated with Wegovy saw an average reduction of 13 cm.
Novo Nordisk said in an emailed statement on Monday that the weight-loss for Wegovy in the head-to-head trial was lower than in a 2021 trial with similar dose.
“Obesity is about more than just a number on a scale,” Novo said, adding that Wegovy is the only medicine from a class of digestion-slowing medicines known as GLP-1 agonists approved to prevent major cardiovascular events like heart attack.
The company also said a trial with higher dose of semaglutide this year showed greater weight-loss.
Lilly reported in December that its obesity drug had already met the main goal, leading to 47% more weight loss than those who received Wegovy. Full data from the study was reported by the company in a press release and presented at the European Congress on Obesity.
The results of the head-to-head trial come days after CVS Health’s decision to drop Zepbound from some lists of medicines it covers for reimbursement, instead favoring Wegovy.
While Lilly’s drug mimics two gut hormones to help reduce weight, Wegovy has a single mode of action.
U.S. approvals for Zepbound and Wegovy were based on separate trials in which Lilly’s drug helped patients lose more than 22% of their weight after 72 weeks, while Wegovy led to 15% weight loss after 68 weeks.
(Reporting by Christy Santhosh in Bengaluru, additional reporting by Jacob Gronholt-Pedersen in Copenhagen; Editing by Leroy Leo and Louise Heavens)