🍪 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 OutcomesGLP-1 and arterial inflammation — 6 month update

GLP-1 and arterial inflammation — 6 month update

Dr.EM_Chicago Fri, Jan 23, 2026 at 7:57 AM 10 replies 716 viewsPage 1 of 2
Dr.EM_Chicago
Member
567
2,567
May 2024
Chicago, IL
Jan 23, 2026 at 9:22 AM#1

I've been tracking inflammatory markers closely in my patients on GLP-1 receptor agonists, and I want to share a particularly striking case (with patient permission) alongside the broader data.

Patient: 58F, BMI 39.4, T2DM (A1C 8.1%), hypertension, on atorvastatin 40mg. Started semaglutide 2.4 mg. Inflammatory panel over 14 months:

MarkerBaseline6 Months14 MonthsReference Range
hsCRP (mg/L)8.42.10.6<1.0 low risk; 1-3 moderate; >3 high
IL-6 (pg/mL)6.83.21.4<1.8
TNF-α (pg/mL)12.47.14.8<8.1
Fibrinogen (mg/dL)468342298200-400
Ferritin (ng/mL)31218814212-150

The hsCRP reduction from 8.4 to 0.6 mg/L represents a 93% decline. This patient went from the highest cardiovascular risk category to the lowest based on hsCRP alone.

"In the SELECT trial, semaglutide reduced hsCRP by approximately 38% from baseline, with greater reductions observed in patients with higher baseline levels."[1]

The question I keep wrestling with: how much of the CV benefit we saw in SELECT is mediated by this anti-inflammatory effect?

[1] Lincoff AM, Brown-Frandsen K, Colhoun HM, et al. Semaglutide and Cardiovascular Outcomes in Obesity without Diabetes. N Engl J Med. 2023;389(24):2221-2232.

49 8jim_asheville, matt_MKE, Dr.ReproEndo and 46 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
james_edin
Member
289
1,234
Sep 2024
Edinburgh, UK
Jan 23, 2026 at 9:39 AM#2

This is a fantastic dataset. The concordance across multiple inflammatory markers (CRP, IL-6, TNF-α, fibrinogen, ferritin) argues strongly against a spurious single-marker finding. This is genuine systemic inflammation resolution.

To your question about mediation: the CANTOS trial provides an important framework. Canakinumab (anti-IL-1β monoclonal antibody) reduced hsCRP by ~35% and MACE by 15% (HR 0.85 for the 150mg dose) without affecting lipids at all.[1] This proved that inflammation is a causal pathway in atherosclerosis, not just a marker.

In SELECT's mediation analyses, hsCRP reduction explained approximately 28% of the MACE benefit — more than weight loss, more than any single metabolic parameter. The remaining benefit likely comes from:

  • Direct anti-atherosclerotic effects (reduced monocyte adhesion, improved endothelial function)
  • Reduced visceral adiposity (the primary source of IL-6 and TNF-α)
  • Improved hepatic steatosis (the liver is a major CRP producer)

[1] Ridker PM, Everett BM, Thuren T, et al. Antiinflammatory Therapy with Canakinumab for Atherosclerotic Disease (CANTOS). N Engl J Med. 2017;377(12):1119-1131.

Last edited: Jan 23, 2026 at 11:39 AM
36 15Dr.PathRoch, mona_PHX, andrew_nyc and 33 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
AttorneyGrant
Member
567
2,890
Apr 2024
Washington, DC
Jan 23, 2026 at 9:56 AM#3

My hsCRP story isn't as dramatic but still notable. Started at 5.2 mg/L with a BMI of 33 and prediabetes. After 9 months on semaglutide 1.7 mg (insurance won't cover 2.4):

  • hsCRP: 5.2 → 1.8 mg/L (65% reduction)
  • A1C: 6.3% → 5.4%
  • Weight: 218 → 186 lbs

What I find interesting is that my hsCRP plateaued at 1.8 for the past 3 months despite continued slow weight loss. Is there a floor effect, or would going to 2.4 mg push it lower?

Last edited: Jan 23, 2026 at 10:56 AM
38 21JenMemphis, pat_auckland, Dr.GastroMayo and 35 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
JessicaH_TX
Senior Member
4,123
13,456
Dec 2023
Houston, TX
Jan 23, 2026 at 10:13 AM#4

There may be a physiological floor for hsCRP reduction depending on the underlying inflammatory milieu. An hsCRP of 1.8 mg/L puts you in the "moderate risk" category and represents a very meaningful improvement from 5.2.

Several factors can maintain residual inflammation even with weight loss and GLP-1 therapy:

  • Remaining visceral adipose tissue (even at a normal BMI, visceral fat distribution matters)
  • Gut microbiome composition (persistent dysbiosis can drive low-grade endotoxemia)
  • Sleep quality (sleep disruption increases IL-6 and CRP)
  • Chronic stress (cortisol-inflammation axis)
  • Periodontal disease (often overlooked contributor to systemic CRP elevation)

Before escalating the semaglutide dose, I'd investigate these modifiable factors. Dental health is one I've seen make a surprising difference — treating periodontitis can drop hsCRP by 0.5-1.0 mg/L.

Last edited: Jan 23, 2026 at 2:13 PM
17 15Dr.NephBHM_UK, kim_atl_prep, sarah_TO and 14 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
jason_paloalto
Member
212
890
Nov 2024
Palo Alto, CA
Jan 23, 2026 at 10:30 AM#5

To add population-level context on CRP reduction across the GLP-1 trials:

TrialDrug / DoseBaseline hsCRP (median)% Reduction vs. Placebo
SELECTSema 2.4 mg3.5 mg/L~38%
SUSTAIN-6Sema 0.5 / 1.0 mg~2.8 mg/L~25%
STEP 1Sema 2.4 mg~3.0 mg/L~34%
SURPASS-4Tirz 5/10/15 mg~3.2 mg/L~32-40%

Higher baseline CRP predicts greater absolute (but not always percentage) reductions. The patient in the OP's case with a baseline of 8.4 mg/L was starting from a markedly inflammatory state, which likely explains the dramatic absolute decline.

For reference, each doubling of hsCRP is associated with an approximately 1.4-fold increase in MACE risk. Going from 8.4 to 0.6 represents a massive shift in predicted risk.

28 12Dr.EndoEP, GraceAZ_72, carl_compliance and 25 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