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Payers and employers have tightened access to the glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor agonist class once these therapies became more commonly prescribed for obesity.
Tirzepatide, the powerful dual agonist that brings weight loss while controlling type 2 diabetes (T2D), now has more data behind it: For patients with obesity and heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), it sharply cuts the risk of dying from a cardiovascular (CV) event or seeing HF worsen, prompting more medication or hospitalization.
Results presented today at the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions in Chicago show that tirzepatide reduced the risk of CV death or HF worsening by 38% compared with placebo. The SUMMIT trial involved 731 adults, including 54% women, who were followed for least 52 weeks (HR, 0.62; 95% CI, 0.41-0.95; P = .026). Worsening HF events drove the results, occurring in 29 patients (8.0%) in the tirzepatide group vs 52 patients (14.2%) in the placebo group.
The findings were simultaneously published in The New England Journal of Medicine.1 Eli Lilly, which markets tirzepatide as Mounjaro to treat T2D and as Zepbound to treat weight loss, paid for the study.
Tirzepatide is an agonist of glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) and glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) receptors. It works by stimulating insulin release from the pancreas to reduce hyperglycemia, while also boosting adiponectin, an anti-inflammatory hormone that regulates fatty acids. This dual mechanism controls blood glucose more aggressively than singular GLP-1s while curbing the patient’s appetite; some have lost up to 21% of their body weight at 72 weeks. Biomarker analyses have found patients treated with tirzepatide have improved insulin sensitivity and B-cell function.
But despite its dual mechanism, tirzepatide has encountered resistance from payers and employers, who have tightened access to the GLP-1 drug class. Although the first GLP-1, exenatide, was approved for T2D nearly 20 years ago, the use of GLP-1s more recently to treat obesity has set off a tidal wave of interest from a much larger group of patients who have obesity but not T2D.
According to the CDC, 40.3% of US adults meet criteria for obesity, and rising numbers are in ranges of severe obesity.2 Rates are higher among adults aged 40 to 59 years than among young adults, data show. The CDC also reports HF is increasing in the US; there are 6.7 million cases today, with this number expected to reach 11.4 million by 2050. HFpEF accounts for 50% of these cases.
The findings from SUMMIT offer some of the most compelling evidence yet that treating obesity with medication could avert long-term health problems and associated costs; as lead author Milton Packer, MD, of Baylor University Medical Center explained in a press conference Friday, weight loss depletes the “angry” fat cells that make up adipose tissue, which triggers inflammation and causes real damage.
“It is not obesity that drives this process,” Packer said. “It is visceral adiposity that drives this process. This is fat around the major organs of the body, particularly fat around the heart. When it becomes expanded, it changes its biology and starts secreting proteins and other molecules that cause fluid retention around the kidney and causes inflammation systemically and within the heart, causing fibrosis.”
Jennifer E. Ho, MD, FAHA, of Harvard Medical School, who was invited to comment on SUMMIT, described it as “practice changing“ even though troubling questions remain. Abandonment rates for GLP-1s among patients who take them for weight loss remain high, she said, and when this happens, the weight is regained.
“A lot of future work needs to be done,” she said, “In thinking about implementation, there are many, many barriers that our patients and our providers face, including access, including cost, including health inequities, including provider expertise to really guide and initiate these therapies successfully.”
Both Packer and Ho said they hoped having evidence that tirzepatide improves HFpEF outcomes while treating obesity would coax wary payers to increase access for patients who meet more refined criteria.
Packer said GLP-1 access problems are due to the "sheer number" of Americans who are obese. Payers and employers, he said, are frightened when they contemplate the cost: "They look at their annual budget, and they’re in pain."
Additional results are as follows1:
The press briefing brought some lively discussion when Packer was asked about the fact that while small, and not statistically significant, there were more adjudicated CV deaths in the study drug arm (8 vs 5). Packer responded there were other data from trials with many more events; he likened numbers that small to a flip of a coin.
The significance of SUMMIT, he said, was that unlike STEP-HFpEF, which measured patient-reported outcomes for patients with obesity and HF taking semaglutide,3 this new trial measures outcomes such as HF hospitalization.
“The SUMMIT trial is the first trial in patients with HFpEF and obesity that had major heart failure outcomes as the primary prespecified end point,” Packer concluded.
References
1. Packer M, Zile MR, Kramer CM, et al; SUMMIT Trial Study Group. Tirzepatide for heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and obesity. N Engl J Med. Published online November 16, 2024. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa241002
2. Emmerich SD, Fryar CD, Stierman B, Ogden CL. Obesity and severe obesity prevalence in adults: United States, August 2021-August 2023. National Center for Health Statistics data brief 508. CDC. September 2024. Accessed November 16, 2024. https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/products/databriefs/db508.htm
3. Shaw ML. Semaglutide enhances heart failure outcomes in obesity. AJMC®. August 30, 2024. Accessed November 16, 2024. https://www.ajmc.com/view/semaglutide-enhances-heart-failure-outcomes-in-obesity