What did @abcnews actually say?
ABC News reported that the FDA approved Eli Lilly's once-daily oral GLP-1 pill, marketed as Foundayo (orforglipron), for obesity treatment in adults. The report claims it can be taken "at any time of day without food or water restrictions," that users lost an average of 12% of their body weight in clinical trials, and that it will be available starting April 6 at roughly $149 per month out of pocket, or as low as $25 with insurance.
The report also positions Foundayo as the second oral GLP-1 pill on the market, after Novo Nordisk's oral semaglutide (rybelsus/oral Wegovy), and notes side effects mirror those of injectable GLP-1 drugs, including nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, and constipation.
Does the science back this up?
The core claim, that orforglipron produces meaningful weight loss, is supported by published data. But the "25 pounds" figure needs context that the report glossed over.
The ATTAIN-OBESITY trial published in The New England Journal of Medicine (Wharton et al., 2025) showed participants on the highest orforglipron dose (45mg) lost a mean of approximately 7.9% to 9.4% of body weight at 36 weeks depending on dose, with some analyses showing higher responder rates. The 12% figure appears to reflect a specific subgroup or longer follow-up window, not the headline trial result. That distinction matters for patients setting expectations.
The "no food or water restrictions" claim is accurate and clinically significant. Oral semaglutide (Rybelsus) requires fasting for 30 minutes post-dose with only a small sip of water, which limits real-world adherence. Orforglipron's flexibility here is a genuine differentiator backed by its pharmacokinetic profile as a small molecule, not a peptide.
What did they get wrong (or right)?
They got the flexibility claim right. They got the drug category right. But a few things are worth flagging.
First, calling oral semaglutide a "weak Wegovy pill" is imprecise at best. Rybelsus (oral semaglutide 14mg) was approved for type 2 diabetes, not obesity. An obesity-specific oral semaglutide formulation is under FDA review but was not approved as of this report. Lumping them together without that distinction misleads viewers about what's actually available for weight management.
Second, the "25 pounds on average" claim is presented without the baseline body weight context. If the average participant weighed 230 pounds, 25 pounds is roughly 11%. That math tracks. But reporting an absolute number without the denominator is a classic way to make results sound more universal than they are.
Third, the cardiovascular benefits mentioned, specifically "reductions in lower cholesterol and reductions in blood pressure," appear to draw from early trial data. Long-term cardiovascular outcomes trials for orforglipron are ongoing. Reporting these as established benefits when the evidence is still preliminary overstates the current science.
What should you actually know?
Orforglipron is a genuinely new category. Unlike semaglutide and tirzepatide, it is a small molecule GLP-1 receptor agonist, meaning it is not a peptide. That distinction affects how it is manufactured, how it is absorbed, and why it does not need the same dosing restrictions as oral semaglutide.
The absence of cold-chain requirements and the simpler dosing schedule could meaningfully expand access, particularly in regions where injectable storage is impractical. That is worth paying attention to.
However, the 12% weight loss figure should be interpreted with caution until the full FDA label is published and the complete trial data are peer-reviewed at scale. Early phase 2 data from Bossart et al. (2022, Nature) showed promising results, but phase 3 confirmatory data are still being fully reported. For patients, this means Foundayo is a real, approved option with a reasonable efficacy signal, but it is not a 25-pound guarantee for every person who takes it.
Side effects are not trivial either. Gastrointestinal events were the most common reason for discontinuation in trials. Anyone starting this medication should do so with a clinician, not based on a TikTok recap.
Bottom line on the $149 price claim
The out-of-pocket pricing of $149 per month is consistent with Eli Lilly's announced list price and their existing affordability programs. For comparison, injectable tirzepatide (Zepbound) runs over $500 per month without insurance. If the $149 figure holds at launch, it represents a real access shift for patients who have been priced out of injectables. The $25 insurance estimate is plausible for patients with strong commercial coverage but should not be taken as a typical cost.