Based on STEP-HFpEF data, semaglutide is a reasonable consideration for your mother's situation. The trial enrolled a very similar patient profile — HFpEF with obesity, on background guideline-directed therapy. The FDA has not yet approved semaglutide specifically for HFpEF, but the obesity indication (Wegovy) provides an approved pathway, and many cardiologists are now using it for the obese HFpEF phenotype.
Practical considerations:
- Start at the low dose (0.25 mg) and titrate slowly — HFpEF patients tend to be older and may be more GI-sensitive
- Monitor fluid status — semaglutide has a natriuretic effect that may necessitate diuretic adjustment
- Monitor renal function — especially if she's on sacubitril-valsartan and empagliflozin (both can affect GFR)
- Ensure adequate protein intake and encourage resistance exercise to mitigate lean mass loss
The conversation with her cardiologist should reference STEP-HFpEF directly. Most cardiologists who follow the literature are aware of these data and many are already incorporating GLP-1 RAs into their HFpEF treatment algorithm.