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Tirzepatide on obstructive sleep apnea-related cardiometabolic risk: secondary outcomes of the SURMOUNT-OSA randomized trial.

Nat Med · 2026

Last updated 2026-05-28

In two 52-week studies with participants who had obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) and obesity, tirzepatide led to greater improvements in cardiometabolic risk factors like blood sugar control and inflammation compared to a placebo. Changes in weight and OSA-related breathing issues helped explain some of these benefits, particularly for blood pressure and certain blood markers, though not for diastolic blood pressure. The findings suggest treating both obesity and sleep-disordered breathing may be necessary for the best cardiometabolic results.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalNat Med, 2026
Citations2
Molecules tirzepatide
Conditions studied Obstructive Sleep Apnea, Cardiovascular Risk Reduction, Obesity

Abstract

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is associated with obesity and cardiovascular risk. The SURMOUNT-OSA master protocol comprised two, 52-week, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 studies (study 1 and study 2) and demonstrated a significant reduction of a number of cardiometabolic risk measures in participants with OSA and obesity following treatment with tirzepatide. Here we report prespecified analysis of cardiometabolic risk measures in SURMOUNT-OSA. Post hoc analyses include changes in a homeostatic model assessment for insulin resistance and mediation analysis to determine the proportion of observed changes attributable to reductions in body weight, apnea-hypopnea index and sleep apnea-specific hypoxic burden. In both study 1 and study 2 of SURMOUNT-OSA, tirzepatide treatment was associated with greater alleviation of cardiometabolic risk factors than placebo. Independent mediation effect of changes in OSA metrics was observed on high-sensitivity C-reactive protein, homeostatic model assessment for insulin resistance and triglycerides. The combination of changes in weight and OSA metrics, as well as weight alone, had a significant mediation effect on systolic blood pressure, but there was no significant mediation effect of weight or OSA metrics observed on diastolic blood pressure. Based on the mediation analysis, treating both sleep-disordered breathing and obesity is likely required to optimize the treatment effect on cardiometabolic benefits for patients with moderate-to-severe OSA and obesity. The ClinicalTrials.gov registration number for this study is NCT05412004 .

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 41540105 ↗

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