Liraglutide vs Pasireotide
Overview
Liraglutide is primarily a weight management & metabolic peptide, while Pasireotide is used for hormonal.
This page compares Liraglutide and Pasireotide across their primary use, typical dosing, reported benefits and side effects, and U.S. regulatory status. For the full monograph on either compound — mechanism of action, clinical research, and references — follow the article links.
Side-by-side comparison
| Liraglutide | Pasireotide | |
|---|---|---|
| Category | Weight Management & Metabolic | Hormonal |
| Regulatory status (US) | FDA approved | FDA approved |
| Typical dosage | 0.6-3.0 mg | 0.6–0.9 mg SC twice daily (Cushing's disease, SC formulation) or 40–60 mg IM every 4 weeks (acromegaly, LAR); 10–40 mg IM every 4 weeks (Cushing's disease, LAR) |
| Frequency | daily | Twice daily (SC formulation) or every 4 weeks (LAR formulation) |
| Reported benefits | Weight loss, blood sugar control, cardiovascular protection | Reduction of cortisol hypersecretion in Cushing's disease, normalization of GH and IGF-1 in acromegaly, pituitary tumor volume reduction, improvement of clinical signs of hypercortisolism |
| Reported side effects | Nausea, GI disturbances, potential pancreatitis | Hyperglycemia, new-onset or worsening diabetes mellitus, diarrhea, nausea, cholelithiasis, QT interval prolongation, bradycardia, hepatic enzyme elevation, adrenal insufficiency (hypocortisolism) |
Key differences
Primary use. Liraglutide is categorised under Weight Management & Metabolic, while Pasireotide falls under Hormonal. Their differing categories mean they are usually chosen for different goals rather than as direct substitutes.
Regulatory status. Liraglutide: FDA-approved. Pasireotide: FDA-approved.
Dosing. Liraglutide is typically dosed at 0.6-3.0 mg (daily). Pasireotide is typically dosed at 0.6–0.9 mg SC twice daily (Cushing's disease, SC formulation) or 40–60 mg IM every 4 weeks (acromegaly, LAR); 10–40 mg IM every 4 weeks (Cushing's disease, LAR) (Twice daily (SC formulation) or every 4 weeks (LAR formulation)).
Can you stack them?
Some protocols combine peptides, but stacking Liraglutide and Pasireotide has not been validated for safety or efficacy in controlled trials. Combining compounds can change their effects and risks. Nothing here is medical advice — consult a qualified healthcare provider before starting or combining any protocol.
Frequently asked questions
- What is the difference between Liraglutide and Pasireotide?
- Liraglutide is primarily a weight management & metabolic peptide, while Pasireotide is used for hormonal. Liraglutide is FDA-approved for one or more indications, whereas Pasireotide is FDA-approved for one or more indications.
- What is Liraglutide used for?
- FDA-approved GLP-1 for weight loss.
- What is Pasireotide used for?
- Multi-receptor somatostatin analog (Signifor/Signifor LAR) FDA-approved for Cushing's disease and acromegaly.
- Can you take Liraglutide and Pasireotide together?
- Some users combine peptides within a single protocol, but stacking Liraglutide and Pasireotide has not been established as safe or effective in controlled trials. Neither this comparison nor PeptideSciences101 is medical advice — consult a qualified healthcare provider before combining any compounds.
- Is Liraglutide or Pasireotide FDA-approved?
- Liraglutide is FDA-approved for one or more indications. Pasireotide is FDA-approved for one or more indications.
Read the full articles
- Liraglutide — full monograph: mechanism, research, dosing & references
- Pasireotide — full monograph: mechanism, research, dosing & references