Rubino Domenica M, Pedersen Sue D, Connery Lisa, Cao Dachuang, Chigutsa Farai, Stefanski Adam, Fraseur Brumm Julia, Griffin Ryan, Gerber Claire
Washington Center for Weight Management and Research, Arlington, Virginia, USA.
C-endo Diabetes and Endocrinology Clinic Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.
Diabetes Obes Metab. 2025 Apr;27(4):1826-1835. doi: 10.1111/dom.16176. Epub 2025 Jan 9.
This analysis evaluated whether gastrointestinal (GI) adverse events (AEs) including nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea (N/V/D) and dyspepsia were associated with weight reduction with tirzepatide across the SURMOUNT-1 to -4 trials.
SURMOUNT-1 to -4 were global Phase 3 clinical trials evaluating the safety and efficacy of tirzepatide among participants with obesity or overweight with or without type 2 diabetes (T2D). Participants were randomly assigned to receive once weekly subcutaneous tirzepatide or placebo. This post hoc analysis investigated weight change at the primary endpoint from baseline among participants who self-reported no N/V/D, any N/V/D or nausea alone. Mediation analyses evaluated the contribution of N/V/D and dyspepsia on weight reduction. Time to first use of antidiarrheal and antiemetic usage was reported by time intervals.
Baseline characteristics were similar between participants who reported N/V/D and those who did not. More participants reported GI AEs in the tirzepatide treatment arms (27.8%-72.8%) than with placebo (12.2%-32.5%). Most GI AEs were non-serious and occurred during dose escalation. Between 1.0% and 10.5% of tirzepatide-treated participants discontinued treatment due to GI AEs. Weight reduction with tirzepatide was similar among participants reporting no nausea, nausea alone, or any N/V/D. Mediation analyses suggested that N/V/D and dyspepsia were associated with up to 3.1% of total weight reduction. When required, first use of antidiarrheal and antiemetic medication was most commonly reported during dose escalation.
In this post hoc analysis, GI AEs appeared to contribute slightly to the weight reduction seen with tirzepatide in participants with obesity or overweight with or without T2D.
本分析评估了在SURMOUNT-1至-4试验中,包括恶心、呕吐、腹泻(N/V/D)和消化不良在内的胃肠道(GI)不良事件(AE)是否与替尔泊肽导致的体重减轻相关。
SURMOUNT-1至-4是全球3期临床试验,评估替尔泊肽在有或无2型糖尿病(T2D)的肥胖或超重参与者中的安全性和有效性。参与者被随机分配接受每周一次的皮下注射替尔泊肽或安慰剂。这项事后分析调查了自我报告无N/V/D、任何N/V/D或仅恶心的参与者在主要终点时相对于基线的体重变化。中介分析评估了N/V/D和消化不良对体重减轻的影响。按时间间隔报告首次使用止泻药和止吐药的时间。
报告有N/V/D的参与者与未报告的参与者之间的基线特征相似。与安慰剂组(12.2%-32.5%)相比,替尔泊肽治疗组中报告胃肠道不良事件的参与者更多(27.8%-72.8%)。大多数胃肠道不良事件不严重,且发生在剂量递增期间。1.0%至10.5%接受替尔泊肽治疗的参与者因胃肠道不良事件而停药。在报告无恶心、仅恶心或任何N/V/D的参与者中,替尔泊肽导致的体重减轻相似。中介分析表明,N/V/D和消化不良与总体重减轻的比例高达3.1%相关。在需要时,首次使用止泻药和止吐药最常报告在剂量递增期间。
在这项事后分析中,胃肠道不良事件似乎对替尔泊肽在有或无T2D的肥胖或超重参与者中导致的体重减轻有轻微贡献。