Non-Alcoholic Steatohepatitis (NASH) - A Review of a Crowded Clinical Landscape, Driven by a Complex Disease.
Fraile. Julia M JM; Palliyil. Soumya S; Barelle. Caroline C; Porter. Andrew J AJ; Kovaleva. Marina M
Key Findings
- NASH affects ~35 million people and has no FDA‑approved treatments yet
- Many drug classes (biologics and small molecules) are in late‑stage trials, including tesamorelin
- Combination therapies are likely needed because NASH is complex
Practical Outcomes
- At this point tesamorelin isn’t ready for self‑experimentation in NASH; keep an eye on upcoming Phase 3 data before considering it. No dosage or protocol guidance can be given yet.
Summary
This review talks about the huge need for drugs to treat NASH, a liver disease, and lists many compounds in the pipeline. Tesamorelin, a peptide, is mentioned as one of the drugs that is expected to start Phase 3 trials soon, but there are no results yet. So right now there’s nothing concrete you can do with tesamorelin for NASH, but it’s a candidate to watch.
Abstract
Non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) is a progressive form of non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), characterized by chronic inflammation and accumulation of fat in liver tissue. Affecting estimated 35 million people globally, NASH is the most common chronic liver condition in Western populations, and with patient numbers growing rapidly, the market for NASH therapy is projected to rise to $27.2 B in 2029. Despite this clinical need and attractive commercial opportunity, there are no Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved therapies specifically for this disease. Many have tried and unfortunately failed to find a drug, or drug combination, capable of unravelling the complexities of this metabolic condition. At the time of writing this review, only Zydus Cadila's new drug application for Saroglitazar had been approved (2020) for NASH therapy in India. However, it is hoped that this dearth of therapy options will improve as several drug candidates progress through late-stage clinical development. Obeticholic acid (Intercept Pharmaceuticals), Cenicriviroc (Allergan), Aramchol (Galmed Pharmaceuticals), Resmetirom (Madrigal Pharmaceuticals), Dapagliflozin and Semaglutide (Novo Nordisk) are in advanced Phase 3 clinical trials, while Belapectin (Galectin Therapeutics), MSDC-0602K (Cirius Therapeutics), Lanifibranor (Inventiva), Efruxifermin (Akero) and Tesamorelin (Theratechnologies) are expected to start Phase 3 trials soon. Here, we have performed an exhaustive review of the current therapeutic landscape for this disease and compared, in some detail, the fortunes of different drug classes (biologics vs small molecules) and target molecules. Given the complex pathophysiology of NASH, the use of drug combination, different mechanisms of actions and the targeting of each stage of the disease will likely be required. Hence, the development of a single therapy for NASH seems challenging and unlikely, despite the plethora of later stage trials due to report. We therefore predict that clinical, patient and company interest in pipeline and next-generation therapies will remain high for some time to come.
Study Information
pubmed
2021
2021-09-22T00:00:00.000Z
10.2147/dddt.s315724