| Literature DB >> 32153507 |
Chelsea S Pan1, Takara L Stanley1,2.
Abstract
Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a common comorbidity in individuals with obesity. Although multiple pharmacotherapeutics are in development, currently there are limited strategies specifically targeting NAFLD. This systematic review summarizes the existing literature on hepatic effects of medications used for weight loss. Glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) agonists are the best-studied in this regard, and evidence consistently demonstrates reduction in liver fat content, sometimes accompanied by improvements in histological features of steatohepatitis and reductions in serum markers of hepatic injury such as alanine aminotransferase (ALT). It remains unclear whether these benefits are independent of the weight loss caused by these agents. Literature is limited regarding effects of orlistat, but a small number of reports suggest that orlistat reduces liver fat content and improves histologic features of NASH, benefits which may also be driven primarily by weight loss. A sizeable body of literature on hepatic effects of metformin yields mixed results, with a probability of modest benefit, but no consistent signal for strong benefit. There are insufficient data on hepatic effects of topiramate, phentermine, naltrexone, bupropion, and lorcaserin. Finally, a few studies to date suggest that sodium-glucose co-transporter-2 (SGLT2) inhibitors may reduce liver fat content and cause modest reductions in ALT, but further study is needed to better characterize these effects. Based on available data, GLP-1 agonists have the strongest evidence base demonstrating beneficial effects on NAFLD, but it is not clear if any weight loss medication has effects on NAFLD superior to those of nutritional modification and exercise alone.Entities:
Keywords: GLP-1 agonists; NAFLD (non-alcoholic fatty liver disease); SGLT2 inhibitors; metformin; obesity; orlistat; steatohepatitis (NASH); weight loss medication
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32153507 PMCID: PMC7046622 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2020.00070
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Characteristics of studies reviewed.
| Anushiravani et al. ( | Metformin 500 mg | 3 months | Y | 1. LS + Placebo | Y | 150 | Adults, NAFLD | N | Not assessed |
| Armstrong et al. ( | Liraglutide 1.8 mg QD | 48 weeks | Y | Placebo | Y | 52 | Adults, NASH, overweight | Y | Histology |
| Aso et al. ( | Dapagliflozin 5 mg QD | 24 weeks | Y | “Standard care” for T2D | N | 57 | Adults, T2D and NAFLD | N | Not assessed |
| Assy et al. ( | Orlistat 120 mg TID + CR | 6 months | N | (Open label) | N | 14 | Adults, obesity and NASH | Y | Histology |
| Aubuchon et al. ( | Metformin 1,000 mg BID | 6 months | Y | 1. Clomiphene 2.Clomiphene+Met | Y | 626 | Adult women, PCOS | N | Not assessed |
| Bi et al. ( | Exenatide 10 mcg BID | 6 months | Y | 1. Lispro 75/25 2.Pioglitazone | N | 33 | Drug-naïve adults with T2D | N | |
| Bouchi et al. ( | Liraglutide 0.9 mg QD | 36 weeks | Y | (Open label) | N | 19 | Adults, T2D on insulin, overweight | N | L:S ratio |
| Bugianesi et al. ( | Metformin 2,000 mg QD | 12 months | Y | 1. Vit E 400 IU daily | N | 110 | Adults, NAFLD, no T2D | Y* | Histology |
| Buse et al. ( | Exenatide 10 mcg BID | 2 years ( | N | (Open label extension phase report) | N | 283 | Adults, T2D | N | Not assessed |
| De Zegher et al. ( | Metformin 425 mg BID × 2 years, then 850 mg BID × 2 years | 4 years | Y | No treatment | N | 34 | Girls with LBW and precocious puberty | N | MRI |
| Duseja et al. ( | Metformin 500 mg TID + LS | 6 months | N | (Separate comparator group) | N | 25 | Adults, NAFLD and ↑ALT after 6 months LS + UDCA | N | Not assessed |
| Dutour et al. ( | Exenatide 10 mcg BID | 26 weeks | Y | “Standard care” for T2D | N | 44 | Adults, obesity + uncontrolled T2D | N | |
| Fan et al. ( | Exenatide 10 mcg BID | 12 weeks | Y | Metformin 500 mg BID (adjusted to max of 1,000 mg BID) | N | 117 | Adults, T2D and NAFLD | N | Not assessed |
| Feng et al. ( | Liraglutide 1.8 mg QD | 24 weeks | Y | 1. Metformin 1,000 mg BID | N | 87 | Adults, T2D and NAFLD | N | U/S |
| Freemark et al. ( | Metformin 500 mg BID | 6 months | Y | Placebo | Y | 32 | Adolescents 12–19 years with obesity | N | Not assessed |
| Frøssing et al. ( | Liraglutide 1.8 mg QD | 26 weeks | Y | Placebo | Y | 72 | Adult women, PCOS | N | |
| Garinis et al. ( | Metformin 500 mg BID | 6 months | Y | LS alone | N | 50 | Adults, obese/ overweight and NAFLD | N | U/S |
| Gupta et al. ( | Metformin 1,000 mg | 16 weeks | Y | Pioglitazone + LS | N | 51 | Adults, T2D | N | L:S ratio |
| Handzlik et al. ( | Metformin 2,000 mg | 5 months | Y | LS alone | N | 42 | Adults, NAFLD | N | CAP |
| Harrison et al. ( | Orlistat 120 mg TID + CR + Vitamin E | 36 weeks | Y | Vitamin E + CR alone | N | 50 | Adults, NASH and overweight | Y | Histology |
| Harrison et al. ( | Orlistat 120 mg TID | 6 months | N | (Open label) | N | 10 | Adults, NASH and obesity | Y | Histology |
| Haukeland et al. ( | Metformin 2,500 mg (3,000 mg if >90 kg) QD | 6 months | Y | Placebo | Y | 48 | Adults, NAFLD | Y | Histology, L:S Ratio |
| Idilman et al. ( | Metformin 850 mg BID | 48 weeks | Y | 1. LS + Rosiglitazone 8 mg daily | N | 74 | Adults, NASH | Y | Histology |
| Ito et al. ( | Ipragliflozin 50 mg QD | 24 weeks | Y | Pioglitazone 15-30 mg | N | 66 | Adults, T2D and NAFLD | N | L:S Ratio |
| Kato et al. ( | Metformin 500 mg QD | 12 weeks | Y | Pioglitazone 15 mg QD | N | 50 | Adults, T2D | N | Not assessed |
| Kelley et al. ( | Orlistat 120 mg TID + LS | 6 months | Y | Placebo + LS | Y | 39 | Adults, T2D, overweight or obese | N | L:S Ratio |
| Kendall et al. ( | Metformin 1,000 mg | 6 months | Y | Placebo | Y | 151 | Children 8–18 years with | N | Not assessed |
| Khoo et al. ( | Liraglutide 3 mg QD | 26 weeks | Y | LS | N | 24 | Adults, NAFLD and obesity | N | MRI |
| Krakoff et al. ( | Metformin 850 mg BID | Ave 3.2 year | Y | Placebo | Y | 2,153 | Adults at risk for T2D | N | Not assessed |
| Kuchay et al. ( | Empagliflozin 10 mg QD | 20 weeks | Y | “Standard care” for T2D | N | 50 | Adults, T2D and NAFLD | N | MRI-PDFF |
| Kusunoki et al. ( | Various doses of 5 SLGT2 inhibitors and 5 DPP4 inhibitors | 6 months | N | (Retrospective chart review) | N | 214 | Adults, T2D | N | Not assessed |
| Kusunoki et al. ( | Luseogliflozin 2.5 mg QD | 24 weeks | N | (Open label) | N | 79 | Adults, T2D | N | Not assessed |
| Lavine et al. ( | Metformin 500 mg BID | 96 weeks | Y | 1. Vitamin E 400 IU BID | Y | 173 | Children 8–17 years with NAFLD and ↑ALT | Y | Histology |
| Lingvay et al. ( | Metformin 1,000 mg BID + insulin | 3 months | N | (Open label) | N | 19 | Adults, newly diagnosed T2D | N | |
| Lingvay et al. ( | Metformin 1,000 mg BID + Pioglitazone 45 mg QD + Glyburide <10 mg QD | Median 31 months | Y | Metformin 1,000 mg BID + aspart 70/30 | N | 16 | Adults, treatment naive T2D | N | |
| Loomba et al. ( | Metformin 2,000 mg QD | 48 weeks | N | (Open label) | N | 28 | Adults, NAFLD, ↑ALT or AST | Y | Histology |
| Magalotti et al. ( | Metformin 500 mg TID | 24 weeks | N | (Open label) | N | 20 | Adults, NAFLD | N | Not assessed |
| Matikainen et al. ( | Liraglutide 1.8 mg QD | 16 weeks | Y | Placebo | Y | 22 | Adults, T2D and obesity | N | |
| Nadeau et al. ( | Metformin 850 mg | 24 weeks | Y | Placebo + LS | Y | 50 | Adolescents 12–18 year, obesity and IR | N | U/S |
| Nair et al. ( | Metformin 20 mg/kg QD | 1 year | N | (Open label) | N | 15 | Adults, NAFLD, ↑ALT | Y* | Histology |
| Nar et al. ( | Metformin 1,700 mg | 6 months | Y | LS alone | N | 34 | Adults, new T2D, NAFLD, and obesity | N | U/S |
| Nobili et al. ( | Metformin 1,500 mg | 2 years | N | (Control group from separate study) | N | 60 | Children 9–18 years, NAFLD, overweight or obese | Y | Histology |
| Omer et al. ( | Metformin 1,700 mg QD | 12 months | Y | 1. Rosiglitazone 4 mg daily | N | 64 | Adults, NAFLD, ↑ALT | Y | Histology |
| Petit et al. ( | Liraglutide 1.2 mg QD | 6 months | N | (Parallel insulin-intensification group) | N | 80 | Adults, uncontrolled T2D | N | |
| Preiss et al. ( | Metformin 500 mg TID or 850 mg TID | 8 months | Y | (Randomized to 1 of 2 metformin doses) | N | 82 | Adult women, PCOS | N | Not assessed |
| Resuli et al. ( | Metformin 850 mg QD + LS | 24 weeks | N | LS alone | N | 61 | Adults, NASH | N | Not assessed |
| Sabuncu et al. ( | Orlistat + LS | 6 months | ? | Sibutramine + LS | N | 25 | Adults, NASH, obesity | N | U/S |
| Sanchez et al. ( | Metformin 1,000 mg QD | 12 weeks | Y | Exercise 60 min × 5 days per week | N | 16 | Adult women, overweight or obese | N | CT |
| Samson et al. ( | Exenatide 10 mg BID + Pioglitazone 45 mg QD | 12 months | Y | Pioglitazone alone | N | 21 | Adults, T2D | N | |
| Schwimmer et al. ( | Metformin 500 mg BID | 24 weeks | N | (Open label) | N | 10 | Children <18y, NASH and obesity | N | |
| Shao et al. ( | Exenatide 10 mcg BID + glargine | 12 weeks | Y | Aspart + glargine | N | 60 | Adults, T2D, NAFLD, obesity, ↑ALT, AST, or GGT | N | U/S |
| Shibuya et al. ( | Luseogliflozin 2.5 mg QD | 6 months | Y | Metformin 1,500 mg QD | N | 32 | Adults, T2D and NAFLD | N | L:S ratio |
| Smits et al. ( | Liraglutide 1.8 mg QD | 12 weeks | Y | 1. Sitagliptin 100 mg QD | Y | 52 | Adults, T2D, overweight | N | |
| Sofer et al. ( | Metformin 1,700 mg QD | 4 months | Y | Placebo | Y | 63 | Adults, NAFLD | N | Not assessed |
| Sturm et al. ( | Metformin 1,500 mg QD + pentoxifylline 4 mg TID + LS | 48 weeks | Y | LS alone | N | 19 | Adults, NASH, ↑ALT | Y | Histology |
| Suzuki et al. ( | Liraglutide 0.9 mg QD | 24 weeks | N | (Open label) | N | 59 | Adults, T2D | N | CT |
| Tang et al. ( | Liraglutide 1.8 mg QD | 12 weeks | Y | Glargine | N | 35 | Adults, T2D inadequately controlled | N | MRI-PDFF |
| Tiikkainen et al. ( | Metformin 1,000 mg BID | 16 weeks | Y | Rosiglitazone 4 mg BID | Y | 20 | Adults, T2D drug naïve | N | |
| Torres et al. ( | Metformin 500 mg BID + Rosiglitazone 4 mg QD | 48 weeks | Y | 1. Rosiglitazone alone | N | 137 | Adults, NASH | Y | Histology |
| Uygun et al. ( | Metformin 850 mg BID + LS | 6 months | Y | LS alone | N | 36 | Adults, suspected NASH | Y | Histology |
| Yabiku et al. ( | Metformin 1,000 mg QD | 24 weeks | Y | 1. Pioglitazone 30 mg QD | N | 886 | Adult males, T2D | N | L:S ratio |
| Zelber-Sagi et al. ( | Orlistat 120 mg TID | 24 weeks | Y | Placebo | Y | 52 | Adults, NAFLD | Y* | U/S |
H-MRS, Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy; Bx, biopsy (Y indicates liver performed as part of the study; Y* indicates that it was performed for only a subset of participants); CAP, controlled attenuation parameter, a measure of liver fat by transient elastography/FibroScan; CR, caloric restriction; CT, computed tomography, assessing liver fat by some measure other than L:S ratio; IR, Insulin resistance; LBW, low birth weight; L:S ratio, liver-spleen ratio assessed by computed tomography; LS, Lifestyle modification, which includes any combination of the following: initial nutritional counseling, nutritional counseling throughout the study, prescribed caloric or macronutrient modification, prescribed exercise of any kind; MRI, Magnetic resonance imaging (with hepatic fat calculated by some method other than PDFF); MRI-PDFF, Magnetic resonance imaging—proton density fat fraction; Rand, randomized; T2D, type 2 diabetes; UDCA, ursodeoxycholic acid; U/S, ultrasound.
Final/maximum doses are shown in cases where dosage was increased over the course of the study.
Only abstract was available, not full manuscript.
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) diagram describing the selection of relevant publications for the review.
Summary of literature—effects on hepatic endpoints.
| Bupropion | No data | No data | No data |
| GLP-1 agonists | Insufficient data: 1 study with adequate duration measured using biopsy: higher resolution of NASH and lower progression of fibrosis compared to placebo ( | Majority of studies show benefit over comparator, roughly 30–45% relative reduction | Majority of studies show modest reductions |
| Metformin | Majority of studies show no benefit over comparator, but some suggest modest improvements in hepatic inflammation and hepatocellular injury. Very few suggest benefit to fibrosis | Majority of studies show no benefit over comparator, but some show modest | Majority of studies show no benefit over comparator, with a few studies showing very modest reductions superior to lifestyle alone |
| Orlistat | Insufficient data: 4 total studies, 3 showing no benefit over comparator ( | Insufficient data: 2 open-label studies without comparators suggest benefit ( | Insufficient data: 2 open-label studies without comparators suggest benefit ( |
| Naltrexone | No data | No data | No data for weight loss indication. From studies in alcoholism, seems to be neutral at low doses (≤50mg/d) but may be hepatotoxic at higher doses |
| SGLT2 inhibitors | No data | Insufficient data: 2 studies with comparators [metformin and standard care] suggest benefit ( | Insufficient data: 3 of 6 studies suggest modest benefit ( |
| Topiramate | No data | No data | No data for weight loss indication. Benefit to lower ALT when used in alcoholism to reduce craving, otherwise no data |