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Weight regain and cardiometabolic effects after withdrawal of semaglutide: The STEP 1 trial extension.

Diabetes Obes Metab · 2022

Last updated 2026-05-28

In a study of 327 adults, those who took semaglutide 2.4 mg weekly lost an average of 17.3% of their body weight over 68 weeks, compared to 2.0% for those on placebo. After stopping the treatment, participants regained about 11.6 percentage points of their lost weight by week 120, leaving them with a net loss of 5.6% from their starting weight, while the placebo group regained only 1.9 percentage points.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalDiabetes Obes Metab, 2022
Citations715
Relative citation ratio70.05
NIH percentile100
Molecules semaglutide
Conditions studied Obesity, Cardiovascular Risk Reduction, Type 2 Diabetes

Abstract

AIM: To explore changes in body weight and cardiometabolic risk factors after treatment withdrawal in the STEP 1 trial extension. MATERIALS AND METHODS: STEP 1 (NCT03548935) randomized 1961 adults with a body mass index ≥ 30 kg/m (or ≥ 27 kg/m with ≥ 1 weight-related co-morbidity) without diabetes to 68 weeks of once-weekly subcutaneous semaglutide 2.4 mg (including 16 weeks of dose escalation) or placebo, as an adjunct to lifestyle intervention. At week 68, treatments (including lifestyle intervention) were discontinued. An off-treatment extension assessed for a further year a representative subset of participants who had completed 68 weeks of treatment. This subset comprised all eligible participants from any site in Canada, Germany and the UK, and sites in the United States and Japan with the highest main phase recruitment. All analyses in the extension were exploratory. RESULTS: Extension analyses included 327 participants. From week 0 to week 68, mean weight loss was 17.3% (SD: 9.3%) with semaglutide and 2.0% (SD: 6.1%) with placebo. Following treatment withdrawal, semaglutide and placebo participants regained 11.6 (SD: 7.7) and 1.9 (SD: 4.8) percentage points of lost weight, respectively, by week 120, resulting in net losses of 5.6% (SD: 8.9%) and 0.1% (SD: 5.8%), respectively, from week 0 to week 120. Cardiometabolic improvements seen from week 0 to week 68 with semaglutide reverted towards baseline at week 120 for most variables. CONCLUSIONS: One year after withdrawal of once-weekly subcutaneous semaglutide 2.4 mg and lifestyle intervention, participants regained two-thirds of their prior weight loss, with similar changes in cardiometabolic variables. Findings confirm the chronicity of obesity and suggest ongoing treatment is required to maintain improvements in weight and health.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 35441470 ↗

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