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Tirzepatide and Cardiovascular Outcomes: A Narrative Review of Mechanisms, Efficacy and Implications for Heart Failure Management.

Endocrinol Diabetes Metab · 2026

Last updated 2026-05-28

Tirzepatide, a drug that targets both GIP and GLP-1 receptors, has shown benefits for people with heart failure linked to obesity. Studies indicate it can improve symptoms, heart function, and reduce worsening heart failure events compared to a placebo, while also helping with weight loss and lowering blood pressure and inflammation. Common side effects include stomach issues like nausea, and higher doses may slightly increase the risk of gallbladder problems. However, its effects on heart failure with reduced pumping ability (HFrEF) are not well studied yet.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalEndocrinol Diabetes Metab, 2026
Citations1
Molecules tirzepatide
Conditions studied Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity, Cardiovascular Risk Reduction, Heart Failure

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Tirzepatide, a dual GIP/GLP-1 receptor agonist, offers a novel cardiometabolic strategy beyond glycemic control with important implications for heart failure care. By producing potent, sustained weight reduction and favourable changes in lipids, blood pressure, systemic inflammation and endothelial biology, tirzepatide targets central pathophysiologic drivers of obesity-related HFpEF. METHODS: We conducted this review to synthesise current evidence on the mechanisms, clinical efficacy and therapeutic implications of tirzepatide for heart failure management, with emphasis on obesity-related HFpEF, cardiorenal effects and safety considerations. Randomised clinical programmes and the SUMMIT outcomes trial have demonstrated symptomatic and functional improvements, reverse cardiac remodelling on imaging, reduced circulating markers of myocardial stress and fewer worsening heart-failure events versus placebo, alongside signals of renal stabilisation. RESULTS: The tolerability profile aligns with the GLP-1 class, with gastrointestinal events predominating and a low risk of clinically important hypoglycemia; biliary events may be more likely at higher doses, while pancreatitis risk has not been clearly elevated. Data in HFrEF remain limited and caution is advised given prior mixed results with incretin therapies and theoretical concerns about rapid weight loss in advanced systolic failure. CONCLUSION: This review integrates mechanistic insights and contemporary trial evidence to clarify how dual incretin agonism may modify the trajectory of obesity-driven heart failure, to inform multidisciplinary clinical decision making, and to highlight key unanswered questions and research priorities needed to define tirzepatide's full role in heart failure management.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 41566974 ↗

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