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Survodutide for the Treatment of Obesity: Rationale and Design of the SYNCHRONIZE Cardiovascular Outcomes Trial.

JACC Heart Fail · 2024

Last updated 2026-07-12

The SYNCHRONIZE-CVOT study is testing survodutide, a drug that targets both glucagon and GLP-1 receptors, to see if it can safely reduce cardiovascular risks in adults with obesity (BMI of 27 or higher) and pre-existing heart or kidney disease, or at least two weight-related risk factors. The trial plans to enroll 4,935 participants and will measure whether survodutide prevents major heart events like heart attacks or strokes over time. This is the first study of its kind to evaluate the long-term cardiovascular effects of survodutide in people with obesity and higher heart disease risk.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalJACC Heart Fail, 2024
Citations27
Relative citation ratio3.67
NIH percentile88
Molecules survodutide

Abstract

Dual agonism of glucagon and glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) receptors may be more effective than GLP-1 receptor agonism alone in reducing body weight, but the cardiovascular (CV) effects are unknown. The authors describe the rationale and design of SYNCHRONIZE-CVOT, a phase 3, randomized, double-blind, parallel-group, event-driven, CV safety study of survodutide, a dual glucagon and GLP-1 receptor agonist, administered subcutaneously once weekly compared with placebo in adults with a body mass index ≥27 kg/m and established CV disease or chronic kidney disease, and/or at least 2 weight-related complications or risk factors for CV disease. The primary endpoint of SYNCHRONIZE-CVOT is time to first occurrence of the composite adjudicated endpoint of 5-point major adverse CV events. This global CV outcomes trial is currently enrolling, with a target recruitment of 4,935 participants. SYNCHRONIZE-CVOT is the first trial that will determine the CV safety and efficacy of survodutide in people with obesity and increased CV risk. (A Study to Test the Effect of Survodutide [BI 456906] on Cardiovascular Safety in People With Overweight or Obesity [SYNCHRONIZE-CVOT]; NCT06077864).

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 39453356 ↗

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