🍪 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
ForumsLab Results & BiomarkershsCRP tracking — inflammatory marker reduction on GLP-1

hsCRP tracking — inflammatory marker reduction on GLP-1

DataDave Mon, Mar 9, 2026 at 4:35 PM 21 replies 700 viewsPage 1 of 5
DataDave
Senior Member
1,678
8,901
Apr 2024
Washington
Online
Mar 9, 2026 at 6:00 PM#1

I want to discuss what I believe is the most consequential finding from the SELECT trial, and one that received insufficient attention relative to the primary MACE endpoint: the signal for all-cause mortality reduction.

In SELECT, all-cause mortality was a pre-specified secondary endpoint. The results:[1]

"All-cause mortality: semaglutide 4.3% vs. placebo 4.7% (HR 0.81; 95% CI, 0.71–0.93)."

This represents a 19% relative reduction in death from any cause. While the trial was not powered for all-cause mortality as a primary endpoint, the point estimate and confidence interval are compelling. The upper bound of the CI (0.93) does not cross 1.0, indicating statistical significance.

Why does this matter more than the MACE endpoint?

  1. All-cause mortality is immune to adjudication bias. Death is an unambiguous endpoint. You can debate whether a troponin elevation was a Type 1 or Type 2 MI, but you can't debate whether someone died.
  2. It captures safety signals. If semaglutide reduced MI but increased cancer, suicide, or pancreatitis deaths, the all-cause mortality endpoint would be neutral or harmful. A favorable all-cause mortality signal means the drug is not "borrowing" from one cause of death to pay for another.
  3. It is the endpoint patients actually care about. Patients don't want to avoid MI only to die of something else. They want to live longer.

Let that sink in: in a 40-month trial, semaglutide reduced the probability of death by approximately 1 in 5 among the events observed. For a drug initiated for "weight management," this is extraordinary.

[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.

17 17VendorMark, COA_Karl, MikeFit_NJ and 14 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
Dr.BariatricHTX
Senior Member
1,456
7,234
Feb 2024
Houston, TX
Mar 9, 2026 at 6:17 PM#2

This is the discussion I've been waiting for on this forum. The mortality signal from SELECT is, in my view, potentially the most important cardiovascular finding since the original statin mega-trials (4S, HPS).

Consider the historical context of mortality reductions from major cardiovascular interventions:

InterventionTrialAll-Cause Mortality HRPopulation
Simvastatin4S (1994)0.70 (0.58–0.85)CHD, high LDL
Atorvastatin 80mgTNT (2005)1.01 (0.85–1.19)Stable CHD
EmpagliflozinEMPA-REG (2015)0.68 (0.57–0.82)T2DM + CVD
Sacubitril/valsartanPARADIGM-HF (2014)0.84 (0.76–0.93)HFrEF
Semaglutide 2.4mgSELECT (2023)0.81 (0.71–0.93)Obesity + CVD

SELECT's mortality HR of 0.81 is in the same league as PARADIGM-HF and is achieved in a broader population. The only recent trial with a more dramatic mortality reduction was EMPA-REG OUTCOME (HR 0.68), but that was in a more specific population (T2DM with established CVD).

We are looking at a drug that prevents death. Period.

24 22pete_RVA, CarlaRPh_TPA, steph_laguna and 21 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
Dr.GutHealth
Senior Member
1,456
7,890
Mar 2024
Minnesota
Mar 9, 2026 at 6:34 PM#3

Let me break down the mortality data more granularly. In SELECT, the causes of death were categorized:

Cause of DeathSemaglutide (n=8803)Placebo (n=8801)
Cardiovascular death223 (2.5%)262 (3.0%)
Non-cardiovascular death156 (1.8%)150 (1.7%)
UndeterminedSmall numbersSmall numbers
Total deaths382 (4.3%)414 (4.7%)

The all-cause mortality benefit is driven primarily by the cardiovascular death reduction. Non-cardiovascular deaths were essentially equal between groups, which is reassuring — it means semaglutide is not increasing cancer mortality, infection mortality, or deaths from other causes.

The absolute risk reduction for all-cause mortality was 0.4 percentage points over ~40 months, yielding a NNT of approximately 250 over 3.3 years. While this sounds high, extrapolated over longer treatment periods (as would occur in real-world practice), the NNT improves substantially.

Last edited: Mar 9, 2026 at 11:34 PM
43 2jennifer_SEA, tyler_CSCS, VanRx_Mike and 40 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report

Sigma-Aldrich — Research-Grade Standards

Certified reference materials, analytical reagents, and research-grade standards for peptide verification. Trusted by laboratories worldwide.

Shop Reference Standards
mel_PDX
Member
189
890
Dec 2024
Portland, OR
Mar 9, 2026 at 6:51 PM#4

As a patient who had an MI at 54 and is now on semaglutide as part of my secondary prevention regimen, this data is incredibly reassuring. My cardiologist explicitly cited the mortality data when he added semaglutide to my regimen (alongside atorvastatin, metoprolol, aspirin, and lisinopril).

I asked him: "If I stay on this medication for 10 years, how much does it improve my odds?" His answer: based on extrapolation of the SELECT data and the consistency with SUSTAIN-6 and FLOW, the cumulative mortality benefit over 10 years could be substantial, potentially a 5-7 percentage point absolute reduction in all-cause mortality in high-risk populations.

That's not a marginal benefit. That's tens of thousands of lives at a population level.

31 11BiostatsBrad, PeptideSynthNJ, Dr.KarenChen and 28 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
rachel_ABQ
Member
178
890
Dec 2024
Albuquerque, NM
Mar 9, 2026 at 7:08 PM#5

Your cardiologist's extrapolation is reasonable but I want to offer a nuance: the mortality curves in SELECT were diverging at the end of the trial (they had not reached a plateau). This means the mortality benefit may actually be greater with longer follow-up, as the separation between curves tends to widen over time for treatments that modify disease progression rather than merely treating events.

This is in contrast to drugs that only treat acute events (e.g., anticoagulants for VTE prevention), where the benefit tends to plateau. GLP-1 agonists appear to be modifying the underlying atherosclerotic process — reducing plaque inflammation, improving plaque stability, slowing new lesion formation — which suggests that the benefit should compound over time.

We won't know for certain until longer-term data are available, but the mechanistic argument for increasing benefit with longer treatment duration is strong.

Last edited: Mar 10, 2026 at 12:08 AM
24 22Dr.CardioMD, EndoResFellow, PharmacoVig_BOS and 21 others
Reply Quote Save Share Report
1235

Similar Threads

Optimal lab testing frequency on GLP-1 — evidence-based schedule5 replies
A1C from 7.2 to 5.1 — my bloodwork transformation19 replies
Thyroid function monitoring on GLP-1 — TSH and free T4 trends3 replies
Lipid panel improvements mega-thread — share your numbers19 replies
Liver enzymes trending down on GLP-1 — ALT/AST normalization17 replies
ForumsNewTrendingMembersAccount

Log In

Forgot password?
No account? Register