Eli Lilly and Co. (LLY) just gave doctors and patients a compelling reason to consider combination therapy for a particularly frustrating condition. On Thursday, the pharmaceutical giant released results from its TOGETHER-PsA trial showing that using Zepbound and Taltz together delivered substantially better outcomes than Taltz alone for people battling both psoriatic arthritis and weight issues.
Psoriatic arthritis, for context, is that unlucky combination condition where you get joint pain, stiffness, and a skin rash all tied to psoriasis. It's linked to weight-related inflammation, which makes the connection to obesity treatment particularly relevant here.
The Numbers Tell the Story
The topline data from this Phase 3b trial is striking. At 36 weeks, 31.7% of patients taking both Taltz (ixekizumab) and Zepbound (tirzepatide) hit the primary endpoint: a 50% improvement in psoriatic arthritis activity plus at least 10% weight reduction. Meanwhile, only 0.8% of patients on Taltz monotherapy achieved that same result. That's not a typo—less than one percent.
The secondary endpoints were equally impressive. The combination therapy delivered a 64% relative increase in patients achieving ACR50 compared to Taltz alone. Translation: 33.5% of combo therapy patients saw at least a 50% reduction in tender and swollen joints along with other core symptoms, versus 20.4% on Taltz by itself. This suggests that tackling obesity or overweight conditions with Zepbound actually reduces the burden of psoriatic arthritis.
Lilly emphasized that TOGETHER-PsA represents the first controlled study evaluating an incretin therapy used alongside a psoriatic arthritis biologic, making this genuinely new territory.




