Survodutide in adults with obesity and metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease: SYNCHRONIZE-MASLD, a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 trial.
The SYNCHRONIZE-MASLD trial investigated survodutide — a dual glucagon receptor/GLP-1 receptor agonist — in 216 adults with obesity and at-risk metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD). Participants were randomized 2:1 to once-weekly subcutaneous survodutide 6.0 mg (n=146) or placebo (n=70) for 48 weeks. The trial had two co-primary endpoints: ≥30% reduction in MRI-assessed liver fat content (LFC) and percentage change in body weight from baseline to week 48. Both endpoints were met. The study found that 84.2% of survodutide-treated participants achieved ≥30% LFC reduction versus 24.3% on placebo. Mean body weight decreased by 12.2% with survodutide compared to 1.0% with placebo. The most common adverse events were gastrointestinal in nature, typically mild-to-moderate and concentrated during dose escalation. Key limitations include the relatively short 48-week duration, which precludes conclusions about long-term outcomes such as fibrosis regression or cardiovascular events, a modest sample size, and recruitment restricted to the United States and Spain, limiting generalizability. The study was funded by the manufacturer and used surrogate endpoints rather than hard clinical outcomes.
Why this grade: This is a phase 3 randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial in humans, but evidence is graded moderate rather than strong due to the relatively small sample size (n=216), short 48-week duration, geographically limited recruitment, and reliance on surrogate endpoints (MRI-PDFF and body weight) rather than hard clinical outcomes such as histological MASH resolution or liver-related mortality.
Survodutide is a glucagon receptor/glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor dual agonist under investigation for treating obesity and related diseases. The SYNCHRONIZE-MASLD phase 3, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial included 216 adults (131 female and 85 male) with obesity (defined as a body mass index ≥30 kg m - 2 or ≥27 kg m - 2 with at least one obesity complication) and at-risk metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD), defined by MASLD with evidence of liver inflammation and/or fibrosis by noninvasive tests (NITs) or biopsy-confirmed metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH). Participants were randomized (2:1) and treated with once-weekly subcutaneous injections of survodutide 6.0 mg (n = 146) or placebo (n = 70). The co-primary endpoints, ≥30% reduction in magnetic resonance imaging-proton density fat fraction (MRI-PDFF)-assessed liver fat content (LFC) and percentage change in body weight (both baseline to week 48), were met. In total, 84.2% of survodutide-treated patients versus 24.3% of placebo-treated patients had ≥30% reduction in LFC using the efficacy estimand (P < 0.0001; treatment regimen estimand: 68.5% versus 28.6%, respectively; P < 0.0001). Mean percentage change in body weight was -12.2% with survodutide and -1.0% with placebo using the efficacy estimand (P < 0.0001; treatment regimen estimand: -8.7% versus -1.4%, respectively; P < 0.0001). The most frequently reported adverse events with survodutide were gastrointestinal, commonly occurring during dose escalation, and were generally of mild-to-moderate severity. In adults with obesity and at-risk MASLD, survodutide treatment was statistically and clinically superior to placebo for reductions in MRI-PDFF-assessed LFC and body weight. Limitations included short trial duration (48 weeks) and limited global reach (participants recruited in the United States and Spain).
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