Metabolic & Weight Loss (GLP-1 and Related)

Liraglutide (Saxenda, Victoza)

First-in-class once-daily GLP-1 receptor agonist that opened the modern incretin era.

Established

At a glance

What it is: First-in-class once-daily GLP-1 receptor agonist that opened the modern incretin era..

Primary research applications:

  • Type 2 diabetes (Victoza)
  • Obesity / weight management (Saxenda)
  • Pediatric obesity (Saxenda, ages 12+)

Editorial summary: Liraglutide established the GLP-1 class for routine clinical use. While newer once-weekly molecules now produce larger weight losses, liraglutide retains a meaningful role — particularly in pediatric obesity, in patients who do not tolerate longer-acting agents, and where its CV outcome data (LEADER) is decisive.

Class / structure
31-amino-acid GLP-1 analog with C16 fatty acid chain
Half-life
≈ 13 hours (once-daily dosing)
First described
1990s (Novo Nordisk)
Regulatory status
FDA-approved (Victoza 2010; Saxenda 2014)

What is Liraglutide?

Liraglutide is a 31-amino-acid GLP-1 analog with a single Lys26 fatty-acid modification (palmitoyl C16). It binds the GLP-1 receptor with high affinity and produces the canonical incretin effects — insulin secretion in response to glucose, glucagon suppression, slowed gastric emptying, and central appetite suppression.[1]

Two formulations exist: Victoza (1.2 mg or 1.8 mg daily) for type 2 diabetes, and Saxenda (3.0 mg daily) for obesity.

Discovery and development

Liraglutide was the first long-acting GLP-1 receptor agonist designed for once-daily dosing, building on the lessons of exenatide (the earlier exendin-4-based agent) and the broader incretin field. It was approved in Europe in 2009 and by the FDA as Victoza for type 2 diabetes in 2010, then as Saxenda for chronic weight management in 2014. Liraglutide remains the molecular template from which semaglutide was developed.[1]

Mechanism of action

Mechanistically, liraglutide is the older sibling of semaglutide — the same receptor, the same pathway. The clinical differences between the two are largely about dosing convenience, magnitude of weight loss, and the breadth of cardiovascular and renal outcomes data accumulated.[2]

Pharmacokinetics

Liraglutide's 13-hour plasma half-life supports once-daily subcutaneous dosing. Its design uses a C16 fatty-acid linker for albumin binding — the same general strategy later refined in semaglutide with a longer C18 diacid for once-weekly dosing. Bioavailability after subcutaneous administration is approximately 55%.

What the research shows

The peer-reviewed literature on Liraglutide is summarized below across two tiers: human research (the highest standard), and preclinical / emerging research (animal models and early-stage human work).

Claims and the evidence behind them

This table summarizes commonly discussed claims and how the published evidence weighs in. The aim is clarity — supported claims, claims that look promising but need more data, and claims that outrun the science.

ClaimWhat the evidence showsVerdict
Reduces HbA1c and CV events in type 2 diabetesLEADER trialSupported
Produces modest but meaningful weight loss in obesitySCALE program (~8% at one year)Supported
Approved and effective in pediatric obesitySCALE TeensSupported
Matches semaglutide for weight loss magnitudeHead-to-head SUSTAIN trials show semaglutide is superiorUnsupported
Stopping leads to weight regainWithdrawal data consistent with the GLP-1 class generallySupported

Reported user experiences

How the research describes administration

Both Victoza and Saxenda are administered as once-daily subcutaneous injections, with stepwise dose titration over four to five weeks to manage gastrointestinal side effects. Saxenda titrates from 0.6 mg up to 3.0 mg daily.

Editorial note

Administration details above describe how the peptide is given in published studies. We summarize this for educational completeness — these descriptions are not protocols, dosing recommendations, or instructions for personal use. Decisions about treatment require an appropriately licensed clinician.

Safety considerations and open questions

The takeaway

Liraglutide remains a clinically useful GLP-1 — particularly where its established cardiovascular outcome data (LEADER), pediatric labeling, or daily-titration profile is preferred. The newer once-weekly molecules have largely supplanted it for adult obesity, but it deserves its place in the incretin family as the molecule that brought the class into mainstream practice.

Frequently asked questions

Why would someone take liraglutide instead of semaglutide?

Pediatric labeling, established CV outcomes data in T2D (LEADER), tolerability differences in some patients, and access or insurance considerations. For most adults pursuing weight loss, semaglutide or tirzepatide produce larger reductions.

Is Saxenda the same drug as Victoza?

Same molecule, different doses and labels. Victoza is FDA-labeled up to 1.8 mg daily for T2D; Saxenda is dosed up to 3.0 mg daily for chronic weight management.

How much weight do people lose on liraglutide?

Roughly 5–8% on average at one year in the SCALE program. Individual response varies considerably. Newer agents typically produce 15–20%.

Is liraglutide safe for adolescents?

The FDA approved Saxenda for ages 12+ based on SCALE Teens. Pediatric use should always be guided by a clinician familiar with pediatric obesity management.

References

  1. Knudsen LB, Lau J. The discovery and development of liraglutide and semaglutide. Front Endocrinol. 2019;10:155. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31031702/
  2. Drucker DJ. Mechanisms of action and therapeutic application of glucagon-like peptide-1. Cell Metab. 2018;27(4):740-756. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29617641/
  3. Marso SP, et al. Liraglutide and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Type 2 Diabetes (LEADER). N Engl J Med. 2016;375:311-322. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27295427/
  4. Pi-Sunyer X, et al. A Randomized, Controlled Trial of 3.0 mg of Liraglutide in Weight Management (SCALE). N Engl J Med. 2015;373:11-22. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26132939/
  5. Kelly AS, et al. A Randomized, Controlled Trial of Liraglutide for Adolescents with Obesity. N Engl J Med. 2020;382:2117-2128. https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32233338/