| Literature DB >> 30282916 |
Rosann Cholankeril1, Vikram Patel2, Brandon J Perumpail3, Eric R Yoo4, Umair Iqbal5, Sandy Sallam6, Neha D Shah7, Waiyee Kwong8, Donghee Kim9, Aijaz Ahmed10.
Abstract
As a chronic disease encompassing a wide spectrum of liver-related histologic damage, nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is becoming a global epidemic with significant impacts on all-cause morbidity and mortality. Insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes mellitus predispose individuals to NAFLD and related complications. Therefore, timely intervention with anti-diabetic medications may prevent and delay the development of NAFLD or have a therapeutic implication. The focus of this review is to evaluate the evidence supporting the efficacy of anti-diabetic medications in the treatment of NAFLD. While many of these anti-diabetic agents have shown to improve biochemical parameters, their effect on hepatic histology is limited. Among anti-diabetic medications, only thiazolidinediones and glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists demonstrate significant improvement in hepatic histology.Entities:
Keywords: NAFLD; NASH; TZD; anti-diabetic medication; metformin
Year: 2018 PMID: 30282916 PMCID: PMC6313421 DOI: 10.3390/diseases6040093
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diseases ISSN: 2079-9721
Comparative efficacy of anti-diabetic agents for the treatment of NAFLD.
| Medications | Insulin Resistance | Body Weight | Body Fat | AST/ALT | Liver Histology |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Biguanides (Metformin) [ | Decreased | Decreased | Decreased | Inconclusive | Inconclusive |
| Thiazolidinediones [ | Decreased | Increased | Increased | Decreased | Decreased |
| GLP-1r agonists [ | Decreased | Decreased | Decreased | Decreased | Decreased |
| DPP-4 inhibitors [ | Decreased | No Effect | No Effect | Decreased/No Effect | No Effect |
| SGLT2 inhibitors [ | Decreased | Decreased | Decreased | Decreased | Inconclusive |
Anti-diabetic therapy for NAFLD and associated outcomes on liver histology and aminotransferases.
| Study | Therapy | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|
| Nair et al. [ | Metformin (20 mg/kg/day); | Histology minor Improvement |
| Haukeland et al. [ | Metformin vs placebo; | Histology not improved |
| Ugyn et al. [ | Metformin (1.7 g/day) + diet vs diet; | Histology not improved |
| FLIRT Trial (Ratziu et al.) [ | Rosiglitazone (8 mg/day) vs placebo; | Histology not improved |
| PIVENS Trial (Sanyal et al.) [ | Pioglitazone (30 mg/day) vs Vitamin E (800 IU/day) vs placebo; 24 months | Histology improved in both Pioglitazone and Vitamin E groups |
| Armstrong et al. [ | Liraglutide (1.8 mg/day) vs placebo; | Histology improved |
| Klonoff et al. [ | Exenatide + Metformin and/or sulfonylurea; 36 months | Histology improved |
| Garcia et al. [ | Exenatide + Metformin | Ultrasound NAFLD improvement in 80% of diabetic patients |
| Shao et al. [ | Exenatide + Insulin Glargine vs insulin (glargine/aspart); 3 months | Fatty liver regression in exenatide + insulin glargine group |
| Yilmaz et al. [ | Sitagliptin 100 mg daily; | Decreased ALT and AST |
| Cui et al. [ | Sitagliptin 100 mg daily vs placebo; | Histology not improved |
| Mashitani et al. [ | Alogliptin; | Limits NAFLD progression |
| Macauley et al. [ | Vildagliptin; | Decreased ALT levels |
| Seko et al. [ | SGLT2 Inhibitor vs DPP4 Inhibitor; | Both had decrease in AST and ALT levels SGLT2 inhibitor had significant decrease in body weight and improved glycemic control |
| Ohki et al. [ | Ipragliflozin added to DPP4 inhibitor or GLP-1r agonist | Decrease ALT |
| Takase et al. [ | Ipragliflozin in T2DM; | Reduction in body weight, adipose tissue, and fat mass |