PMID-36322838 – STEP TEENS Semaglutide Adolescents

PMID-36322838 — STEP TEENS: Once-Weekly Semaglutide in Adolescent Obesity (Phase 3)

[DRAFT — authored 2026-04-19. Citation web-verified 2026-04-19 against PubMed.]

Citation

Weghuber D, Barrett T, Barrientos-Pérez M, Gies I, Hesse D, Jeppesen OK, Kelly AS, Mastrandrea LD, Sørrig R, Arslanian S, on behalf of the STEP TEENS Investigators. Once-Weekly Semaglutide in Adolescents with Obesity. N Engl J Med. 2022;387(24):2245-2257. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa2208601. PMID: 36322838. ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04102189.

External URL: DOI resolver

Study Design

  • Phase: 3
  • Design: Multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled
  • Randomization: 2:1 to semaglutide 2.4 mg weekly SC or matching placebo
  • Duration: 68 weeks treatment + 7-week follow-up
  • N: 201 participants (ages 12 to <18 years)
  • Setting: Multinational

Population

  • Adolescents aged 12 to <18 years
  • Obesity (BMI ≥95th percentile for age and sex) or overweight (BMI ≥85th percentile) with at least one weight-related comorbidity
  • Mean baseline BMI approximately 37 kg/m²
  • Concurrent lifestyle intervention (reduced-calorie diet and increased physical activity)

Intervention

  • Semaglutide: 0.25 mg weekly → titrated to 2.4 mg weekly over 17 weeks (standard Wegovy titration)
  • Placebo: Matching weekly SC injection with identical titration schedule
  • Both arms: supervised lifestyle intervention

Outcomes

Primary — Percent change in BMI at week 68

  • Semaglutide 2.4 mg: -16.1% mean BMI reduction
  • Placebo: +0.6% mean BMI change — slight increase (growth-adjusted)
  • Between-group difference: Approximately -16.7 percentage points (P<0.001)

Key Secondary

  • Body weight change: Corresponding large reductions in the semaglutide arm
  • Proportion achieving ≥5% body weight reduction: ~73% semaglutide vs ~18% placebo
  • Cardiometabolic improvements: Waist circumference, HbA1c, lipids, ALT all improved in semaglutide arm
  • Quality of life: Improvements in physical functioning and related PROs

Safety

  • GI adverse events (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, abdominal pain) predominant in semaglutide arm — similar in character to adult STEP data
  • Cholelithiasis events reported in semaglutide arm; gallbladder-event monitoring appropriate
  • No new pediatric-specific safety signals
  • Serious adverse events numerically similar between arms

Key Findings

STEP TEENS is the landmark Phase 3 trial establishing semaglutide's efficacy and safety in adolescent obesity. The -16.1% mean BMI reduction is substantially larger than any prior pediatric anti-obesity pharmacotherapy trial. Core points:

  1. Adolescents respond comparably to adults. Effect size (percent BMI/body-weight reduction) approaches adult STEP 1 outcomes.
  2. Developmental context. Placebo arm shows slight BMI increase consistent with ongoing puberty-related adiposity trajectory, underscoring that "BMI stability" in this age group is not clinically inert.
  3. FDA approval followed. Semaglutide (Wegovy) received FDA expanded approval for use in adolescents aged ≥12 years with obesity based on STEP TEENS data.
  4. Clinical integration: Obesity-specialty pediatric care, structured lifestyle intervention, and family-centered counseling remain essential alongside pharmacotherapy.

Clinical Relevance

Youth-onset obesity is a strong predictor of adult obesity and its complications. STEP TEENS supports:

  • Semaglutide 2.4 mg weekly as an evidence-based option for adolescents ≥12 years with obesity (BMI ≥95th percentile) or overweight (≥85th percentile) with weight-related comorbidity
  • Use within a structured lifestyle-intervention framework
  • Pediatric obesity medicine specialist oversight where available

Companion pediatric evidence:

Limitations (Author-acknowledged)

  • Adolescent population; continued surveillance of long-term developmental, reproductive, and psychosocial outcomes is ongoing
  • 68-week duration; sustained maintenance of effect and weight regain on discontinuation require longer follow-up
  • Generalizability across adolescent-obesity phenotypes requires care
  • Underrepresentation of certain pediatric subpopulations (younger children <12, severe syndromic obesity)

Evidence Level

Level Ib (Oxford CEBM) — adequately-powered Phase 3 RCT with pre-specified primary endpoint.

Linked Peptides

Related Studies

Orchestrator Notes

  • Citation web-verified 2026-04-19 via PubMed.
  • NCT04102189 confirmed.
  • Primary evidence for Semaglutide profile pediatric-prescribing section.

Tags

#research #RCT #phase-3 #semaglutide #adolescent #pediatric #obesity #step-teens #nejm #evidence-level-Ib