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?
- 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.
- 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.
- 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.