| Literature DB >> 29247356 |
Yoshio Sumida1, Masashi Yoneda2.
Abstract
Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is the most prevalent liver disease worldwide, and there is no approved pharmacotherapy. The efficacy of vitamin E and pioglitazone has been established in nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), a progressive form of NAFLD. GLP-1RA and SGLT2 inhibitors, which are currently approved for use in diabetes, have shown early efficacy in NASH, and also have beneficial cardiovascular or renal effects. Innovative NASH therapies include four main pathways. The first approach is targeting hepatic fat accumulation. Medications in this approach include modulation of peroxisome proliferator-activator receptors (e.g., pemafibrate, elafibranor), medications targeting farnesoid X receptor axis [obeticholic acid; OCA)], inhibitors of de novo lipogenesis (aramchol, ACC inhibitor), and fibroblast growth factor-21 analogues. A second target is oxidative stress, inflammation, and apoptosis. This class of drug includes apoptosis signaling kinase 1 (ASK1) inhibitor and emricasan (an irreversible caspase inhibitor). A third target is intestinal microbiomes and metabolic endotoxemia. Several agents are in ongoing trials, including IMMe124, TLR4 antagonist, and solithromycin (macrolide antibiotics). The final target is hepatic fibrosis, which is strongly associated with all-cause or liver-related mortality in NASH. Antifibrotic agents are a cysteine-cysteine motif chemokine receptor-2/5 antagonist (cenicriviroc; CVC) and galectin 3 antagonist. Among a variety of medications in development, four agents such as OCA, elafibranor, ASK1 inhibitor, and CVC are currently being evaluated in an international phase 3 trial for the treatment of NASH. Within the next few years, the availability of therapeutic options for NASH will hopefully curb the rising trend of NASH-related diseases.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetes; GLP-1 receptor agonist; Hepatic fibrosis; NASH; SGLT2 inhibitor
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29247356 PMCID: PMC5847174 DOI: 10.1007/s00535-017-1415-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Gastroenterol ISSN: 0944-1174 Impact factor: 7.527
The summary of recommended pharmacotherapies for NASH/NAFLD in guidelines or guidance
| AGA/AALSLD (2012) | JSG/JSH (2014) | EASL/EASD/EAO (2016) | AASLD guidance (2017) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Vitamin E | First-line therapy for biopsy-proven NASH without diabetes and cirrhosis (800 mg/day) | Recommended | Not firmly recommended, but could be used | May be considered in biopsy-proven NASH without diabetes and cirrhosis (800 mg/day) |
| UDCA | Not recommended | Not recommended | Not mentioned in detail | Not recommended |
| Pioglitazone | Can be used in patients with biopsy-proven NASH | Recommended in NASH with insulin resistance | Not firmly recommended, but could be used | Can be used in patients with biopsy-proven NASH |
| Metformin | Not recommended as a specific treatment for NASH | Not recommended as a specific treatment for NASH | Insufficient evidence | Not recommended as a specific treatment for NASH |
| GLP-1RA | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Premature as a specific treatment for NASH |
| ω3 fatty acid | May be considered in NAFLD with hypertriglyceridemia | Not mentioned | Reduced lipid in plasma and liver, but no evidence related to NASH | Not recommended as a specific treatment for NASH |
| Statin | Can be used to treat dyslipidemia | Recommended for hypercholesterolemia | Can be used to reduce LDL-C and prevent cardiovascular risk | Can be used to treat dyslipidemia |
| Pentoxifylline | Not mentioned | Recommended, but commercially unavailable in Japan | Not mentioned | Not mentioned |
| OCA | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Not mentioned | Off-label use not recommended (approved for PBC in USA) |
Fig. 1Fibrosis stage-based treatment algorithm for NASH/NAFLD
Fig. 4Milestones in the treatment of NASH are “ABC”??
Fig. 5Variety of stakeholders in the treatment of NASH/NAFLD
Clinically meaningful outcomes in patients with NAFLD/NASH
| Histological improvement in NASH |
| Steatosis |
| Inflammation |
| Hepatocyte ballooning |
| Fibrosis |
| Incident neoplasms |
| Hepatic cancer |
| Extra-hepatic cancer |
| Mortality/morbidity |
| All cause mortality/morbidity |
| Liver—related mortality/morbidity (LT) |
| Symptoms/QOL (patient reported outcome: PRO) |
| Hepatic failure (ascites, edema, jaundice, variceal hemorrhage, etc.) |
| QOL (physical health, mental health) |
| Labor productivity |
| Well-being |
| Economics |
| Lifetime medical cost |
Fig. 6NASH drug pipelines