The STEP-HFpEF trial results, published by Kosiborod et al. in the NEJM, address one of the most challenging intersections in medicine: heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) and obesity.[1]
Why this matters: HFpEF accounts for ~50% of all heart failure but has had no effective pharmacotherapy until recently. SGLT2 inhibitors showed modest benefit (EMPEROR-Preserved, DELIVER), but the effect was smaller than in HFrEF. HFpEF with obesity (the "obese HFpEF phenotype") may represent a distinct pathophysiology where adiposity-driven inflammation and hemodynamic overload are the primary drivers.
Trial design: Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled. N = 529 adults with HFpEF (EF >= 45%), NYHA class II-IV, BMI >= 30, and KCCQ-CSS < 90 (indicating symptoms). Semaglutide 2.4 mg weekly vs placebo. 52 weeks.
Dual primary endpoints:
- Change in KCCQ-CSS (symptom score): +16.6 vs +8.7 points (difference 7.8 points, 95% CI: 4.8-10.9, p < 0.001)
- Change in body weight: -13.3% vs -2.6% (difference -10.7%, p < 0.001)
Key secondary outcomes:
- 6-minute walk distance: +21.5 m vs +1.2 m (difference 20.3 m, p < 0.001)
- hsCRP: -43.5% vs -7.3% (p < 0.001)
- NT-proBNP: -20.9% vs -5.3% (p < 0.001)
- Hierarchical composite (death, HF events, KCCQ, 6MWD): win ratio 1.72 (95% CI: 1.37-2.15)
A 7.8-point improvement in KCCQ-CSS is clinically meaningful (threshold typically 5 points). The 20-meter 6MWD improvement exceeds what SGLT2i achieved in HFpEF. And the inflammatory biomarker reduction suggests mechanistic engagement beyond weight loss.
[1] Kosiborod MN, et al. N Engl J Med. 2023;389(12):1069-1084.