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by pcrh
58 days ago
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If you grouped all GLP-1 agonists that had entered clinical trials, they would be shown as successful [0]. No GLP-1 receptor agonist has failed to reduce appetite in clinical trials, but some were better than others. The point about the anti-amyloid trials is that they all succeeded in removing amyloid. But they did not improve cognition, and only some resulted in a slightly slower rate of decline in cognition (people still declined). [0] https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39841962/ >Forty-seven RCTs were included, with a combined cohort of 23,244 patients. GLP-1 RAs demonstrated a mean weight reduction of -4.57 kg (95% CI -5.35 to -3.78), mean BMI reduction of -2.07 kg/m2 (95% CI -2.53 to -1.62), and mean waist circumference reduction of -4.55 cm (95% CI -5.72 to -3.38) compared with placebo. |
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Your meta review has like 80%-90% of the studies on semaglutide and liraglutide. When finding random effect per drug, they even say this:
> Hence, the drugs eligible for meta-regression were semaglutide (subcutaneous injection, once weekly) and liraglutide (subcutaneous injection, once daily), which both showed a dose-dependent treatment effect in terms of weight and BMI.
And the class-effect is much more modest than semaglutide by itself would have shown, exactly as I said. What is the point?