🍪 CompoundTalk uses cookies to improve your experience, analyze traffic, and personalize content. By continuing to use this site, you agree to our Cookie Policy.
Evidence-based GLP-1 & peptide discussion since 2023
ForumsCardiovascular OutcomesBlood pressure reduction mechanisms on GLP-1 — natriuresis Page 2

Blood pressure reduction mechanisms on GLP-1 — natriuresis

Dr.RenalNash Wed, Mar 11, 2026 at 6:10 PM 18 replies 335 viewsPage 2 of 4
tommy_boulder
Member
234
1,123
Nov 2024
Boulder, CO
Mar 11, 2026 at 9:00 PM#6

This is blowing my mind. I came to this forum because I was considering semaglutide for weight loss and was embarrassed about it — feeling like it's "cheating" or a "vanity drug." Reading about mortality reductions, cardiovascular protection, kidney protection... this reframes everything.

Is there any other single drug in medicine that simultaneously reduces weight, improves glucose, lowers blood pressure, improves lipids, reduces inflammation, protects the kidneys, and reduces mortality?

9 4paul_denver, TinaHashiRN, robert_kc and 6 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
KevinCompounds
VIP Member
5,432
18,234
Dec 2023
Nevada
Mar 11, 2026 at 9:17 PM#7

Honestly? No. I've been practicing endocrinology for 18 years and I have never seen a single drug class with this breadth of benefit across this many organ systems and outcomes. The closest historical parallel might be the early statin era, when we first realized that a single pill could reduce MI, stroke, and death. But even statins don't improve weight, blood pressure, glucose, or kidney function.

And please abandon the "cheating" narrative. Obesity is a chronic, relapsing, neurobiological disease with strong genetic determinants. Using a medication to treat it is no different from using insulin for type 1 diabetes or levothyroxine for hypothyroidism. The stigma around obesity medication is a cultural artifact, not a medical reality.

You're not cheating. You're treating a disease with an evidence-based therapy that happens to also extend your life. That's medicine working as intended.

28 3Dr.RaviCardio, jennifer_SEA, tyler_CSCS and 25 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
PharmacoVig_BOS
Senior Member
1,567
8,901
Feb 2024
Boston, MA
Mar 11, 2026 at 9:34 PM#8

To close with perspective: if we apply the SELECT mortality data (HR 0.81 for all-cause death) to the estimated 650 million adults with obesity worldwide, and assume even a fraction could be treated, the population-level impact is staggering.

For the United States alone, with approximately 100 million adults with obesity and established or at-risk CVD, a 19% relative mortality reduction could translate to prevention of an estimated 40,000-80,000 deaths annually, depending on uptake, adherence, and baseline risk.

For context, that's comparable to the estimated lives saved annually by all statin prescriptions in the US combined. GLP-1 agonists have the potential to be the most impactful pharmacological intervention for cardiovascular mortality since statins.

39 0DataDave, Dr.GutHealth, amsterdam_pete and 36 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report

Janoshik Analytical — Independent Testing

Trusted third-party HPLC & mass spectrometry analysis. Verify peptide purity with the lab the community relies on. Independent. Accurate. Transparent.

Verify Your Peptides
Admin
Administrator
2,456
9,812
Oct 2023
Online
Mar 11, 2026 at 9:51 PM#9

This thread captures exactly why this forum exists: to discuss the clinical evidence behind these medications with rigor, nuance, and respect for both the data and the patients who stand to benefit.

The SELECT mortality data, combined with FLOW's mortality signal, STEP-HFpEF's functional improvements, and the SURPASS program's metabolic data, collectively make the strongest case in modern medicine for a single drug class addressing multiple dimensions of cardiometabolic disease.

Pinned. This is a foundational thread for understanding the CV evidence behind GLP-1 receptor agonists.

4 6BiostatsBrad, PeptideSynthNJ, Dr.KarenChen and 1 other
Reply Quote Save Share Report
Dr.KarenChen
VIP Member
4,210
24,567
Nov 2023
San Francisco, CA
Mar 11, 2026 at 10:08 PM#10

I'll add a final thought. We are at a genuine inflection point in cardiometabolic medicine. Just as the statin revolution of the 1990s transformed secondary prevention, the GLP-1/GIP revolution of the 2020s is transforming how we think about the intersection of obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease, kidney disease, liver disease, and mortality.

The evidence is no longer theoretical or preliminary. SELECT (HR 0.80 for MACE, HR 0.81 for mortality), SUSTAIN-6 (HR 0.74 for MACE), FLOW (HR 0.76 for kidney composite, HR 0.80 for mortality), STEP-HFpEF (dramatic functional improvement) — these are not small, exploratory trials. These are large, well-powered, rigorously conducted trials published in the New England Journal of Medicine.[1,2,3]

The question is no longer whether these drugs work. The question is how to ensure equitable access to the most important new drug class of our generation.

[1] Lincoff AM, et al. N Engl J Med. 2023;389(24):2221-2232.
[2] Marso SP, et al. N Engl J Med. 2016;375(19):1834-1844.
[3] Perkovic V, et al. N Engl J Med. 2024;391(2):109-121.

37 14sarah_nash92, FitDadDave, RunnerRach and 34 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report

Similar Threads

SELECT trial: 20% MACE reduction — mechanistic deep dive7 replies
Semaglutide cardiovascular benefit independent of weight loss11 replies
STEP-HFpEF: semaglutide in heart failure with preserved EF15 replies
GLP-1 and arterial inflammation — hsCRP and IL-6 reduction data18 replies
Lp(a) on GLP-1 agonists — any impact on this risk factor?8 replies
ForumsNewTrendingMembersAccount

Log In

Forgot password?
No account? Register