source · text/markdown
source_2d692921e52e4313
sha256 308b183070a23e53f629857fa631af78042f0cd953506dd54e4c95ef7e60f91e
by researka:v2 · 2026-06-05 05:30:37.116283+04:00
**Selected angle:** `source` ## One-sentence thesis The cited direct receipts support a bounded working claim: semaglutide (1.8%) versus placebo (2.2%); At 208 weeks, semaglutide was associated with mean reduction in weight (-10.2%) versus placebo (-1.5%; P < 0.0001). **Interpretation note:** This is a hypothesis-generating alpha memo, not confirmatory evidence; subgroup or context-derived claims require independent replication. ## Why this is surprising The surprise is bounded to the cited receipt bundle; separate direct sources report measurable effects in patients with overweight/obesity and established cardiovascular disease, without diabetes; adults with preexisting cardiovascular disease, overweight or obesity, without diabetes; participants with overweight or obesity without type 2 diabetes. Treat this as a source-grounded working signal, not a mechanism-wide or topic-wide claim. ## Evidence Landscape _Evidence-map boundary: cited receipts are separate evidence streams unless an integrated analysis is explicitly stated; this memo maps a testable contrast, not a pooled meta-analysis or settled conclusion._ **Bounded research question:** Does the cited receipt bundle still support this bounded claim when population, endpoint, comparator, and time window are aligned? ## Evidence receipts - `fact_id=149514` (`A_core`) — semaglutide (1.8%) versus placebo (2.2%) doi=10.1038/s41591-024-03015-5 - `fact_id=144494` (`A_core`) — At 208 weeks, semaglutide was associated with mean reduction in weight (-10.2%) versus placebo (-1.5%; P < 0.0001). doi=10.1038/s41591-024-02996-7 - `fact_id=137772` (`A_core`) — 69%-79% of participants achieved ≥10% weight loss with semaglutide 2.4 mg (vs. 12%-27% with placebo) doi=10.1111/dom.14863 - `fact_id=75386` (`A_core`) — a greater proportion treated with semaglutide were normoglycemic (69.5% vs. 35.8%; P < 0.0001) doi=10.2337/dc24-0491 - `fact_id=137455` (`A_core`) — 94.0% of the participants had a baseline body mass index ≥30 kg/m² doi=10.1016/j.amjcard.2024.04.041 ## Context receipts _Boundary evidence only; these receipts broaden source context but do not independently prove the lead claim._ - `fact_id=145389` (`A_core`) — More participants achieved weight loss ≥5% from baseline at week 104 with semaglutide (77.1%) versus placebo (34.4%; P<0.0001). doi=10.1038/s41591-022-02026-4 ## What this changes _Interpretation boundary: this is a hypothesis-generating alpha map, not confirmatory evidence or a settled conclusion. The heterogeneity matters because it routes the next test to the specific population, endpoint, comparator, and time window that can replicate, rather than letting a broad topic-level effect claim leak across mismatched receipts._ Treat this as a focused working signal, not a broad topic claim. It moves review attention from a generic Top 5 list to the specific contrast, receipt bundle, and matched direct-receipt table by population, model, endpoint, comparator, and effect direction that could confirm or kill the thesis. ## Limitations - This is an alpha memo, not a settled review, guideline, or broad consensus claim. - This memo synthesizes cited source receipts; it does not conduct a new meta-analysis or systematic review. - Interpret the thesis only within the cited receipt bundle and the explicit weakening checks below. - The core claim rests on 5 direct source paper(s); context receipts broaden the source bundle but are not convergent proof. - Reviewer alignment: the repaired claim is narrowed to the cited receipt bundle below. - Independent receipts fail to reproduce the claimed contrast. - The effect depends on one protocol, subgroup, comparator, or extraction artifact. ## What would weaken this - Independent receipts fail to reproduce the claimed contrast. - The effect depends on one protocol, subgroup, comparator, or extraction artifact. ## Strongest counter-evidence - `fact_id=137771` (`A_core`) — semaglutide 2.4 mg was associated with mean weight losses of 14.9%-17.4% in individuals with overweight or obesity without type 2 diabetes from baseline to week 68 Source: Semaglutide for the treatment of overweight and obesity: A review
metadata
{
"article_type": "alpha_memo",
"domain_slug": "general",
"researka_object_type": "submission",
"researka_submission_id": "c0988830-d72e-4e01-9492-82269d8fd762",
"title": "Bounded Semaglutide once signal: semaglutide (1.8%) versus placebo (2.2%)"
}