| Literature DB >> 31783920 |
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fatty liver is associated with obesity, type 2 diabetes, hyperlipidemia, hypertension, and metabolic syndrome. While there are no approved drugs for the treatment of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) or nonalcoholic steatohepatitis, strategies to ameliorate fatty liver often target these related diseases. We sought to determine if any medications approved by the US Food and Drug Administration to treat diabetes are helpful in reducing weight and improving steatohepatitis in patients with NAFLD.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetes; Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease; Pharmacotherapy; Systematic review
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31783920 PMCID: PMC6884753 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-019-1200-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Fig. 1PRISMA 2009 Flow Diagram
Studies of thiazolidinediones to treat nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
| Author, year country trial name (quality rating) | Population demographics | Interventions (group sizes) duration | Efficacy/effectiveness outcomes A vs. B | Harms A vs. B |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aithal, 2008 [ | Nondiabetic adults with biopsy-confirmed NASH Age: 53 y % female: 39 Ethnicity: NR BMI, kg/m2: 30.3 | A: Pioglitazone 30 mg/d ( B: Placebo ( Duration: 12 months | Number (%) with improvement ( Fibrosis: 9/31 (29%) ( Steatosis: 15/31 (48%) ( Changes from baseline ( Weight, kg: 2.6 ( ALT: − 37.7 ( | Serious AEs: NR Withdrawal due to AEs: 3/37 (8.1%) vs. 4/37 (10.8%) |
| Anushiravani, 2019 [ | Adults with probable NAFLD with or without elevated ALT/AST Age: 47 y % female: 49 Ethnicity: NR BMI, kg/m2: 25.1 vs. 26.1 | A. Pioglitazone 15 mg/d ( B. Placebo ( Duration: 3 months | Changes from baseline ( BMI: − 0.6 vs. − 0.7 kg/m2; ALT: − 8.6 vs. − 0.6; AST: − 6.7 vs. − 0.9; | None |
| Belfort, 2006 [ | Adults with type 2 diabetes or impaired glucose tolerance and biopsy-confirmed NASH Age: 51 y % female: 55 Ethnicity: NR BMI, kg/m2: 33.2 | A: Pioglitazone 30 mg/d for 2 months, then 45 mg/d ( B: Placebo ( Duration: 6 months | Percent with fibrosis improvement: 46% vs. 33%, Changes from baseline ( AST: − 19 ( ALT: − 39 ( Weight, kg: 2.5 ( BMI: 1.1 ( | Serious AEs: NR Withdrawal due to AEs: 1/29 (3.5%) vs. 1/25 (4.0%) |
| Cusi, 2016 [ | Patients with prediabetes or type 2 diabetes and nonalcoholic steatohepatitis proven by biopsy Age: 50.5 Sex: 70.3 % male Ethnicity: 24.8% White, 67.3% Hispanic, 0.08% Other BMI: 34.4 Mean NAS: 4.5 Mean fibrosis stage: 1.0 HbA1C with diabetes: 6.95%, without diabetes 5.7% Participants with diagnosed NASH: 86.1% Mean ALT: 59.5 | A. Pioglitazone 45 mg per day ( B. Placebo, ( All patients were prescribed a hypocaloric diet. Both groups followed with open-label phase with Pioglitazone for 18 months Duration: 18 months | Greater than 2 point reduction of NAS without worsening fibrosis: 29% vs. 17%, Fibrosis; greater than 1 point improvement: 39% vs. 25%, Fibrosis mean change in score improved with pioglitazone: 0 vs. − 0.5, Weight: pioglitazone group gained 2.5 kg, BMI: treatment group increase of 2.5 kg, | NR |
| Rana, 2016 [ | Patients with ultrasound diagnosed NAFLD without history of use of insulin sensitizers or hypolipidemic drug use Age: NR Sex: NR Ethnicity: Indian Liver status: AST 55.14 IU/mL; ALT 64.30 (AST and ALT were different at baseline between treatment groups) BMI: 27.95 | A. Metformin (31) B. Rosuvastatin (34) C. Pioglitazone (33) Duration: 24 weeks | Change in ultrasound score (fatty liver) at 24 weeks: our analysis A vs. C: 0.065 vs. − 0.697 ( B vs. C: − 1.265 vs. − 0.697 ( Weight change at 24 weeks: our analysis A vs. C: − 4.76 vs. 0.03 ( B vs. C: − 4.25 vs. 0.03 ( AST change at 24 weeks: our analysis A vs. C: − 14.07 vs. − 23.73 ( B vs. C: 8.35 vs. − 23.73 ( ALT change at 24 weeks: our analysis A vs. C: − 15.55 vs. − 24.67 ( B vs. C: 8.06 vs. − 24.67 ( | NR |
| Razavizade, 2013 [ | Adults with NAFLD assessed via ultrasonography and predictive formula Age: 35.3 y % female: 15 Ethnicity: NR BMI, kg/m2: 27.7 Diabetes: 7.5% | A: Metformin 1000 mg/d ( B: Pioglitazone 30 mg/d ( Duration: 4 months | Changes from baseline ( Liver fat fraction: − 2.53 ( AST: − 10.83 ( ALT: − 21.75 ( Weight, kg: − 2.73 ( | Serious AEs: NR Withdrawal due to AEs: none |
| Sanyal, 2010 [ | Nondiabetic adults with biopsy-confirmed NASH Age: 46.3 y % female: 60 Ethnicity, % white: 88 BMI, kg/m2: 34 | A: Pioglitazone 30 mg/d ( B: Vitamin E 800 IU/d ( C: Placebo ( | Changes from baseline ( NASH improvement, NAFLD activity score: − 1.9 ( Steatosis: − 0.8 ( Fibrosis: − 0.4 ( AST: − 20.4 ( ALT: − 40.8 ( Weight, kg: 4.7 ( | Serious AEs: NR Withdrawal due to AEs: None |
| Sharma, 2012 [ | Adults with biopsy-confirmed NASH Age: 38.9 y % female: 46 Ethnicity: NR BMI, kg/m2: 24.9 Diabetes: NR | A: Pentoxifylline 1200 mg/d ( B: Pioglitazone 30 mg/d ( Duration: 24 weeks | Changes from baseline ( Brunt score: − 0.34 ( Steatosis: − 0.83 ( Fibrosis: 0.08 ( | Serious AEs: NR Withdrawal due to AEs: None |
| Ratziu, 2008 [ | Adults with biopsy-confirmed NASH Age: 53.6 % female: 41 Ethnicity: NR BMI, kg/m2: 31 Diabetes: 32% | A: Rosiglitazone 8 mg/d (4 mg/d for first month) ( B: Placebo ( Duration: 12 months | Changes from baseline, between-groups NAFLD activity score: − 1 vs. 0, Steatosis, % reduction: − 20% vs. − 5%, Fibrosis: 0.03 vs. − 0.18, ALT, number (%) achieving normalization: 12/32 (38%) vs. 2/31 (7%), ALT, mean % change from baseline: − 28% vs. − 2%; mean reduction, − 44% vs. 0% AST, mean % change from baseline: − 8% vs. 9%; mean reduction, − 62% vs. + 15% | Serious AEs: NR Withdrawal due to AEs: 1/32 (3.1%) vs. 0/31 Dose reduction due to AEs: 5/32 (15.6%) vs. 1/31 (3.2%) |
| Torres, 2011 [ | Adults with biopsy-confirmed NASH Age: 49.4 y % female: 36 Ethnicity, %: Caucasian: 65 Hispanic: 22 BMI, kg/m2: 33.2 Diabetes: 16.7% | A: Rosiglitazone 8 mg/d ( B: Rosiglitazone 8 mg/d + metformin 1000 mg/d ( C: Rosiglitazone 8 mg/d + losartan 50 mg/d ( Duration: 48 weeks | Subjects with final biopsy: 26 vs. 28 vs. 35 Changes from baseline, between-groups Resolution of definite NASH, NAFLD activity score: − 1.77 vs. − 1.32 vs. − 1.37, Steatosis: − 0.85 vs. − 0.82 vs. − 0.74, Fibrosis: − 0.70 vs. − 0.59 vs. − 0.32, AST: − 39.6 vs. − 35.0 vs. − 48.7, NS (exact ALT: − 17.4 vs. − 19.9 vs. − 21.7, NS (exact Weight, kg: 0.9 vs. − 1.2 vs. 3.7, | Serious AEs: NR Withdrawal due to AEs: not reported by group |
Studies of GLP-1 agonists to treat nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
| Author, year country trial name (quality rating) | Population demographics | Interventions (group sizes) duration | Efficacy/effectiveness outcomes A vs. B | Harms A vs. B |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Armstrong, 2013 [ | Patients with type 2 diabetes who were unable to maintain glycemic control (HbA1c ≥ 7%) with diet and exercise alone, or with oral antidiabetic treatment Age: 55.9 years Gender, % Female: 46.5 Ethnicity, %: White: 78.6 Asian/Hawaiian/Pacific Islander: 12.7 Black/African American: 5.8 Other: 2.1 BMI: NR NAFLD/NASH Stage: NR Liver enzymes (IU/L): Total ALT mean (SD): 29.4 (16.6) Normal ALT mean (SD): 19.1 (5.6) Abnormal ALT mean (SD): 39.4 (17.7) | LEAD A: Liraglutide 0.6 mg/day (475) B: Liraglutide 1.2 mg/day (896) C: Liraglutide 1.8 mg/day (1363) D: Placebo (524) Duration: 26 weeks LEAD-2 0.6, 1.2, or 1.8 mg/day liraglutide, 4 mg/day glimepiride or placebo, all in combination with metformin | LEAD In patients with elevated ALT, liraglutide 1.8 significantly reduced ALT compared with placebo (and was dose responsive); however, after correcting for change in weight, the difference was no longer significant: Mean difference − 1.41, LEAD2 64% of patients had elevated liver fat on CT; as above liraglutide improved liver fat in a dose dependent way; however, there was no significant differences between liraglutide and placebo after correcting either for weight loss or HbA1c ( | LEAD WAE: 9% vs. 9% vs. 3% (liraglutide vs. placebo, SAE: 7% vs. 6% vs. 6% GI disorders: 46% vs. 45% vs. 18% (liraglutide vs. placebo, LEAD2 NR |
Armstrong, 2016 [ UK LEAN (good) | Patients had histologically confirmed NASH Age: 51 Sex: 60% male Ethnicity: White: 88% Asian: 4% Black: 2% Other: 6% Liver status: NAS: 4.9; ALT: 72 IU/mL; F3-F4: 52% BMI: 36 Diabetes: 33% | A. Liraglutide 1.8 mg (26) B. Placebo (26) Duration: 48 weeks | Resolution of NASH: 39% vs. 9% (RR 4.3, 95% CI 1.0 to 17.7) Change in NAS: − 1.3 vs. − 0.8, Change in fibrosis stage: − 0.2 vs. 0.2, Patients with improvement in fibrosis: 26% vs. 14%, Patient with worsening fibrosis: 9% vs. 36%, Change in ALT: − 26.6 vs. − 10.2, Change in AST: − 27 vs. + 9 IU/L; | WAE: 8% vs. 4% ( SAE: 8% vs. 8% GI disorders: 81% vs. 65% ( |
| Shao, 2014 [ | Patients with type 2 diabetes, obesity, NAFLD, and elevated liver enzymes with normal renal function Age: 43 Sex: 48% male Ethnicity: Chinese Mild NAFLD: 40% Moderate NAFLD: 42% Severe: 18% BMI: 30 HbA1c: 7.64% | A. exenatide + glargine (30) B. Intensive insulin: Insulin aspart + insulin glargine (30) Duration: 12 weeks | Reversal rate of NAFLD based on ultrasound: A vs. B: 93% vs. 67% , Differences in weight change post minus pretreatment: A vs. B: − 7.77 kg vs. 3.27, No difference between groups in change in HbA1c: A vs. B: − 1.42% vs. − 1.31%, | NR |
Studies of metformin to treat nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
| Author, year country trial name (quality rating) | Population demographics | Interventions (group sizes) duration | Efficacy/effectiveness outcomes | Harms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A vs. B | A vs. B | |||
| Anushiravani, 2019 [ | Adults with probable NAFLD with or without elevated ALT/AST Age: 47 y % female: 49 Ethnicity: NR BMI, kg/m2: 25.1 vs. 26.1 | A. Metformin 500 mg/d ( B. Placebo ( Duration: 3 months | Changes from baseline ( BMI: − 0.6 vs. − 0.7 kg/m2; ALT: − 10.1 vs. − 0.6; AST: − 6.4 vs. − 0.9; | None |
| Haukeland, 2009 [ | Adults with biopsy-confirmed NAFLD Age: 47.4 y % female: 27.2 Ethnicity, % white: 86.4% BMI, kg/m2: 30.8 Diabetes: 27.3% | A: Metformin 2500 mg/d (3000 mg if weight > 90 kg) ( B: Placebo ( Duration: 6 months | Percentage with improvement ( Steatosis: 25% ( Fibrosis: 5% ( NAFLD activity score: 20% ( Changes from baseline ( Weight, kg: − 4.3 ( BMI: 1.3 ( | Serious AEs: NR Withdrawal due to AEs: 2/24 (8.3%) vs. 0/24 (0%) |
Omer, 2010 [ Turkey (fair) | Adults with type 2 diabetes or impaired glucose tolerance and biopsy-confirmed NAFLD Age: 48.9 y % female: 45.3 Ethnicity: NR BMI, kg/m2: 30.6 Diabetes: NR | A: Metformin 1700 mg/d + rosiglitazone 4 mg/d ( B: Metformin 1700 mg/d ( C: Rosiglitazone 4 mg/d ( Duration: 12 months | Changes from baseline ( NAFLD score ( AST: − 15.4 ( ALT: − 22.7 ( BMI: − 1.3 ( | Serious AEs: NR Withdrawal due to AEs: Not adequately reported |
| Rana, 2016 [ | Patients with ultrasound diagnosed NAFLD without history of use of insulin sensitizers or hypolipidemic drug use Age: NR Sex: NR Ethnicity: Indian Liver status: AST 55.14 IU/mL; ALT 64.30 (AST and ALT were different at baseline between treatment groups) BMI: 27.95 | A. Metformin (31) B. Rosuvastatin (34) C. Pioglitazone (33) Duration: 24 weeks | Change in ultrasound score (fatty liver) at 24 weeks: our analysis A vs. B: 0.065 vs. − 1.265 ( A vs. C: 0.065 vs. − 0.697 ( Weight change at 24 weeks: our analysis A vs. B: − 4.76 vs. − 4.25 ( A vs. C: − 4.76 vs. 0.03 ( AST change at 24 weeks: our analysis A vs. B: − 14.07 vs. 8.35 ( A vs. C: − 14.07 vs. − 23.73 ( ALT change at 24 weeks: our analysis A vs. B: − 15.55 vs. 8.06 ( A vs. C: − 15.55 vs. − 24.67 ( | NR |
| Razavizade, 2013 [ | Adults with NAFLD assessed via ultrasonography and predictive formula Age: 35.3 y % female: 15 Ethnicity: NR BMI, kg/m2: 27.7 Diabetes: 7.5% | A: Metformin 1000 mg/d ( B: Pioglitazone 30 mg/d ( Duration: 4 months | Changes from baseline ( Liver fat fraction: − 2.53 ( AST: − 10.83 ( ALT: − 21.75 ( Weight, kg: − 2.73 ( | Serious AEs: NR Withdrawal due to AEs: None. |
Studies of DPP-4 inhibitors to treat nonalcoholic fatty liver disease
| Author, year country trial name (quality rating) | Population demographics | Interventions (group sizes) duration | Efficacy/effectiveness outcomes | Harms |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deng, 2017 [ | Patients with type 2 diabetes for less than 2 years without complications and fatty liver diagnosed by ultrasound Age: 64 Sex: 75% male Ethnicity: Liver status: ALT 35 IU/mL; AST: 32 IU/mL BMI: 24 Diabetes: HbA1c 7.4% | A. Sitagliptin 50 to 100 mg (36) B. Diet and exercise Duration: 52 weeks | No difference in change in AST ( Greater decrease in HbA1c with sitagliptin (− 0.81) vs. diet and exercise (− 0.25), | NR |