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Tirzepatide

Mounjaro, Zepbound, LY3298176

Quick Stats
Studies 183
Trials 100
Score 3
2025 pubmed 4 citations

Can Dual Incretin Receptor Agonists Exert Better Cardiovascular Protection than Selective GLP-1 Receptor Agonists? Highlights from SURPASS-CVOT.

Fadini. Gian Paolo GP

Key Findings

  • Tirzepatide was non‑inferior to dulaglutide for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) but did not achieve superiority
  • Tirzepatide lowered HbA1c about 0.8% more than dulaglutide
  • Tirzepatide produced roughly 7% greater weight loss than dulaglutide

Practical Outcomes

  • For biohackers, tirzepatide can be considered when the goal is stronger blood‑sugar reduction and more weight loss, but don’t expect it to add extra heart‑protective benefits beyond what GLP‑1 drugs already provide. Use dosing similar to clinical trials and keep an eye on cardiovascular markers while monitoring any side effects.

Summary

The study shows tirzepatide works at least as well as the GLP‑1 drug dulaglutide at preventing heart attacks and strokes, but it doesn’t beat it. However, tirzepatide does lower blood sugar a bit more and helps people lose more weight than dulaglutide. So, while you won’t get extra heart protection, you may see better glucose control and weight loss.

Abstract

Despite advances in cardiovascular risk reduction in type 2 diabetes (T2D), a persistent gap remains compared to individuals without diabetes. Glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists (GLP-1RA) have provided consistent cardiovascular benefits. With more cardiovascular protective agents available for diabetes management, their incremental effect may be nearing a ceiling. The SURPASS-CVOT trial innovatively compared the dual GIP/GLP-1RA tirzepatide with the selective GLP-1RA dulaglutide, demonstrating noninferiority for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE; HR 0.92; 95.3% CI 0.83-1.01; p = 0.086) and suggesting a potential 28% MACE risk reduction versus an imputed placebo. However, superiority over dulaglutide was narrowly missed. Despite greater improvements in glycemia (0.8% greater HbA1c reduction) and weight (7% greater weight loss), tirzepatide appeared to confer limited incremental cardiovascular benefit, raising questions about mechanism saturation or trial design constraints. Exploratory analyses showed promising benefits on mortality and renal function but require cautious interpretation. The trial's active comparator/imputed placebo design reflects an evolving ethical and therapeutic landscape in diabetes care. Whether dual incretin receptor agonism can meaningfully exceed current cardioprotective thresholds remains uncertain. By now, we may need new paradigms to overcome what may turn out to be a therapeutic ceiling for cardiovascular protection in the T2D population.

Study Information

Provider

pubmed

Year

2025

Date

2025-08-31T00:00:00.000Z

DOI

10.1007/s13300-025-01784-x

Citations

4

References

12