A groundbreaking study from King's College London has discovered that semaglutide, a diabetes medication, can effectively treat fatty liver disease. Researchers found the drug can halt and potentially reverse metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH), a serious liver condition. The global trial involved 800 participants and showed promising results in reducing liver inflammation and improving liver health. While the treatment showed significant potential, researchers caution that more investigation is needed to fully understand its long-term implications.
May 02, 2025
Diabetes drug can effectively treat fatty liver: Study
"MASLD is a
growing problem worldwide and this trial will provide real hope for patients
with MASH" - Prof Philip Newsome, King's College
Treating
patients with semaglutide -- an anti-diabetic medication -- can halt and even
reverse liver disease, according to a study.
Key Points
1 Major clinical trial shows 62.9% reduction in
liver inflammation
2 Semaglutide linked to significant liver fibrosis
improvements
3 Patients experienced 10.5% weight loss during
treatment
Researchers from
the King's College London, UK, chose to investigate semaglutide as a potential
treatment because this class of drug helps reduce fat and liver scarring for
people with metabolic dysfunction associated steatohepatitis (MASH) -- a
life-threatening form of liver disease.
MASH is a more
severe form of Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease
(MASLD), formerly known as non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) -- a
long-lasting liver condition caused by having too much fat in the liver.
It is closely
linked with obesity as well as conditions such as type 2 diabetes and heart and
circulatory disease.
In the trial
conducted across 37 countries around the world, 800 participants were randomly
assigned to receive a once-weekly injection of 2.4 milligrams of semaglutide or
placebo, alongside lifestyle counselling.
The results,
published in the New England Journal of Medicine, showed that after 72 weeks of
treatment, 62.9 per cent of participants experienced a reduction in
steatohepatitis (inflammation of the liver with fat accumulation in the liver)
versus 34.3 per cent for participants who took the placebo.
About 37 per
cent of the semaglutide group also had improvements in their liver fibrosis
versus 22.4 per cent in the placebo group.
"MASLD is a
growing problem worldwide and this trial will provide real hope for patients
with MASH. While these results must be treated with caution, the analysis shows
semaglutide can be an effective tool to treat this advanced liver
disease," said Prof Philip Newsome, from King's College.
Researchers also
found that people receiving semaglutide had improvements in liver enzymes and
other blood measures of liver fibrosis, as well as 10.5 per cent weight loss.
However,
gastrointestinal adverse events were more common in the semaglutide group, such
as nausea, diarrhoea, constipation, and vomiting, the team said.
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