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Semaglutide Effects on Cardiovascular Outcomes in People With Overweight or Obesity (SELECT) rationale and design.

Am Heart J · 2020

Last updated 2026-05-28

The SELECT study is testing whether the weight-loss drug semaglutide, given as a 2.4 mg injection once a week, can reduce major heart problems like heart attacks and strokes in people who are overweight or obese and already have heart disease but do not have diabetes. The trial compares semaglutide to a placebo, both added to usual heart care, and is the first of its kind to see if an obesity medication can directly lower these serious heart risks.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalAm Heart J, 2020
Citations189
Relative citation ratio9.50
NIH percentile97
Molecules semaglutide
Conditions studied Obesity, Cardiovascular Risk Reduction

Abstract

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Although it has been widely appreciated that obesity is a major risk factor for CVD, treatments that produce effective, durable weight loss and the impact of weight reduction in reducing cardiovascular risk have been elusive. Instead, progress in CVD risk reduction has been achieved through medications indicated for controlling lipids, hyperglycemia, blood pressure, heart failure, inflammation, and/or thrombosis. Obesity has been implicated as promoting all these issues, suggesting that sustained, effective weight loss may have independent cardiovascular benefit. GLP-1 receptor agonists (RAs) reduce weight, improve glycemia, decrease cardiovascular events in those with diabetes, and may have additional cardioprotective effects. The GLP-1 RA semaglutide is in phase 3 studies as a medication for obesity treatment at a dose of 2.4 mg subcutaneously (s.c.) once weekly. Semaglutide Effects on Heart Disease and Stroke in Patients with Overweight or Obesity (SELECT) is a randomized, double-blind, parallel-group trial testing if semaglutide 2.4 mg subcutaneously once weekly is superior to placebo when added to standard of care for preventing major adverse cardiovascular events in patients with established CVD and overweight or obesity but without diabetes. SELECT is the first cardiovascular outcomes trial to evaluate superiority in major adverse cardiovascular events reduction for an antiobesity medication in such a population. As such, SELECT has the potential for advancing new approaches to CVD risk reduction while targeting obesity.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 32916609 ↗

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