Health

Weight Loss Drug Wegovy Reduces Heart Attack and Stroke Risk by 20 Percent

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The weight-loss drug Wegovy reduces the risk of experiencing or dying from events like heart attacks and strokes by 20 percent in people with obesity and preexisting heart disease, according to results from a late-stage clinical trial published in The New England Journal of Medicine.

For the study, scientists randomly assigned 17,604 people with obesity and heart disease to receive weekly injections, of either a 2.4 milligram dose of Wegovy or a placebo, for almost three years on average. By the end of the study, 579 people on Wegovy died of cardiovascular causes or experienced things like heart failure, heart attacks, and strokes, compared with 701 people in the placebo group — meaning Wegovy reduced this risk by 20 percent.

“This is the first weight management therapy to show that it can reduce this risk on top of all of the other therapies patients take for cardiovascular disease,” says lead study author A. Michael Lincoff, MD, of the department of cardiovascular medicine at the Cleveland Clinic in Ohio.

Wegovy, like the type 2 diabetes drug Ozempic, contains the active ingredient semaglutide. These drugs are in a family of medicines known as glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) agonists, which work by mimicking the action of a hormone that makes people feel full.

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