Structure Therapeutics CEO on obesity pill and more

Structure Therapeutics CEO on obesity pill and more


Ray Stevens, chief executive officer of Structure Therapeutics Inc., during a Bloomberg Television interview at the JPMorgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco, Jan. 12, 2026.

Benjamin Fanjoy | Bloomberg | Getty Images

A version of this article first appeared in CNBC’s Healthy Returns newsletter, which brings the latest health-care news straight to your inbox. Subscribe here to receive future editions.

After the launch of the first-ever GLP-1 pill for weight loss from Novo Nordisk this month, obesity was top of mind at the annual JPMorgan Healthcare Conference, which drew thousands of pharma and biotech companies, investors, advisors and analysts.

I sat down with Ray Stevens, the CEO of obesity market hopeful Structure Therapeutics, about the biotech’s path forward and his expectations for the future of the booming GLP-1 space. 

It’s a big year for Structure, as the company’s daily oral GLP-1 is slated to enter Phase 3 trials. Shares of Structure soared more than 100% on Dec. 9 after it released mid-stage data showing that its pill, aleniglipron, helped patients with obesity lose more than 11% of their weight at 36 weeks, when adjusted for placebo.

Here are some highlights from my interview with Stevens at the conference. 

What will define success for your company this year? 

What will make your pill competitive in the market? 

Sheldon Cooper | Lightrocket | Getty Images

Stevens said there are four reasons. 

First, efficacy. The Phase 2 trial in December showed that a higher, 240-milligram dose helped patients lose up to 15.3% of their weight at 36 weeks, when adjusted for placebo. 

Stevens said other competitors are reporting that level of weight loss after a longer time period, such as 60 to 72 weeks. 

Safety is another factor, he added. For example, Structure observed no drug-related liver injuries across studies on the pill — an issue that dogged other experimental oral obesity treatments. 

Stevens said the third reason is the relatively low cost of manufacturing the pill, which is a small-molecule drug. 

“We have the ability to scale at a very large scale, and so we can supply the entire U.S. market easily,” he said. 

The fourth factor, he said, is that Structure’s pill is combinable. 

The company released data showing that it can pair its oral GLP-1 with its other drug targeting the amylin gut hormone and achieve “really synergistic effects,” Stevens said. He added that an oral GLP-1 can be combined with other types of treatments, such as PCSK9 inhibitors, or drugs that drastically lower “bad” LDL cholesterol. 

“Aleniglipron is very combinable with other medicines, so we’re excited,” Stevens said. 

What role do you believe pills will play in the space? 

Oral drugs could expand the market, Stevens said. He noted that 100 million people in the U.S. need treatment for obesity but only around 5 million are receiving the existing injections. 

The “real growth” and uptake of the pills is going to come from primary care physicians, who write the majority of prescriptions for Americans, Stevens said. 

Those doctors prefer pills for their flexibility, he added. 

Stevens said he has seen cases where patients taking the injections experience side effects and “are just really unhappy for a week and they will not get near that needle ever again.” But daily pills can make it easier to take the drugs. 

For example, he said a patient could cut a pill in half to mitigate side effects on a day where they have an important meeting to attend. 

What’s in store for the future of the obesity drug market? 



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