Conference Coverage

Effective NASH medications are coming ‘sooner than you think’


 

REPORTING FROM ACG 2019

Clinical implications of the coming wave of medications

In Dr. Alkhouri’s view, the target population for pharmacotherapy will be NASH patients with advanced disease, but not too far advanced; that is, those with stage 2 or 3 fibrotic changes in addition to liver inflammation, hepatocyte injury, and steatosis.

“These are the patients with a high chance of progressing to cirrhosis and end-stage liver disease,” the gastroenterologist said.

Patients with earlier-stage nonalcoholic fatty liver disease are best managed via lifestyle changes, with particular emphasis upon 10% weight loss accompanied by exercise. And patients with more advanced disease – NASH with cirrhosis – appear thus far to be beyond the reach of the next-generation therapies.

None of the coming drugs is a cure-all. In the landmark phase 3 REGENERATE trial, for example, the rate of the primary outcome – fibrosis improvement of at least one stage plus no worsening of NASH at 18 months – was 23% in patients randomized to obeticholic acid at 25 mg/day, compared to 12% with placebo.

“These are not like hepatitis C medications, with 97% efficacy, so combination therapy targeting upstream and downstream for NASH is rational,” Dr. Alkhouri observed.

He reported serving on advisory boards for Allergan, Gilead, and Intercept, and receiving research grants from those companies as well as from Galmed, Genfit, and Madrigal.

*This story was updated on 12/5/2019.

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