Ron Cooper highlights a key disconnect: Wall Street values the highest efficacy ("more is better"), but community physicians, who treat most patients, weigh three factors equally: efficacy, tolerability, and ease of administration. A drug that seamlessly integrates into their practice flow can win significant market share without best-in-class efficacy.

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Breakthrough drugs aren't always driven by novel biological targets. Major successes like Humira or GLP-1s often succeeded through a superior modality (a humanized antibody) or a contrarian bet on a market (obesity). This shows that business and technical execution can be more critical than being the first to discover a biological mechanism.

Competitive advantage in the weight-loss drug market is shifting from maximizing total weight lost to the *quality* of that loss. The next frontier involves preserving muscle while reducing fat and minimizing side effects like nausea. This signals a market evolution toward more nuanced, patient-centric solutions beyond a single metric.

The obesity drug market is moving past the "weight loss Olympics." While high efficacy is the entry ticket, new differentiators are emerging. Companies like Wave Life Sciences are focusing on muscle-sparing properties, while Structure is advancing oral GLP-1s. This indicates a maturing market where patient convenience, quality of weight loss, and long-term maintenance are becoming key value drivers.

Tirzepatide is a rare "once in a blue moon" drug because it is both more potent and better tolerated than its main competitor. This paradoxical profile—achieving superior efficacy with fewer side effects—has established it as the "king of the hill" in the obesity market and created an extremely high bar for any challenger.

A key trend in 2025's drug approvals is that "best-in-class" therapies are distinguished not just by efficacy, but by innovations in formulation and delivery that improve the patient experience. Examples include subcutaneous versions of IV drugs and new delivery methods that expand patient access.

Neurocrine's strategy with its M4 agonist hinges on achieving superior safety and tolerability through high selectivity. The company believes that for chronic psychiatric disorders, long-term patient adherence—driven by fewer side effects—is a more critical factor for commercial success than marginal gains in efficacy.

Despite showing massive weight loss, new obesity drugs from Eli Lilly and others have high discontinuation rates due to side effects. This suggests the industry's singular focus on efficacy may be hitting diminishing returns, opening a new competitive front based on better patient tolerance and adherence.

While efficacy seems similar to Bristol's Kamsiyos, MYCorzo's key advantage is being less resource-intensive for doctors. With fewer required echos, a better drug interaction profile, and faster titration, it simplifies physician workflow, which could drive adoption and market share over time.

Instead of competing on price, MYQORZO differentiates from its predecessor (BMS's Kamsiyos) with a "lighter" FDA-mandated safety program (REMS). This addresses key physician pain points like dosing flexibility and eliminating monthly pharmacy checks, aiming to boost adoption by improving the user experience.

The ultimate validation for a new medical treatment is when physicians themselves start using it. The high rate of GLP-1 drug use among neuroscientists and other doctors, who have the deepest understanding of the risks and benefits, is a powerful signal of the drug's effectiveness.

Wall Street's Focus on Peak Efficacy Misses the Community Physician's Reality | RiffOn