Surfing the MASH Tsunami
Driving the Discussion in Fatty Liver Disease. Join hepatology researcher and Key Opinion Leader Jörn Schattenberg, Liver Wellness Advocate Louise Campbell, and Forecasting and Pricing Guru Roger Green and a global group of Key Opinion Leaders and patient advocates as they discuss key issues in Fatty Liver disease, including epidemiology, drug development, clinical pathways, non-invasive testing, health economics and regulatory issues, from their own unique perspectives on the Surfing the MASH Tsunami podcast. #MASH #MAFLD #FattyLiver #livertwitter #AASLD #GlobalLiver #NoNASH #EASL
Surfing the MASH Tsunami
S2-E17.2 — Modeling the relative impact of treating NASH vs. CVD in patients with different fibrosis levels
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HEP Dynamics
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Season 2
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Episode 17
Ian Rowe presents more findings from his work in Leeds, revealing paradoxes and complexity in the patient screening process. Listen to this conversations to consider the goals for a therapy that, in Ian's words, "treats the patient and not the NASH."
Ian Rowe and colleagues have created a model to assess the tradeoff of liver risk reduction vs. CVD risk reduction at different levels of fibrosis and age. The model suggests that for F2 and F3 patients, the cardiovascular profile of a medication may have greater effect on overall morbidity and mortality than the liver profile, even if the drug produces significant liver improvements. The model and its outputs are enlightening, the questions it raises are clinically important. Stephen Harrison shares some recently available data on efruxifermin that suggests a positive effect for compensated cirrhotics, and questions what a drug must do to make sense for earlier stage patients.
Ian Rowe and colleagues have created a model to assess the tradeoff of liver risk reduction vs. CVD risk reduction at different levels of fibrosis and age. The model suggests that for F2 and F3 patients, the cardiovascular profile of a medication may have greater effect on overall morbidity and mortality than the liver profile, even if the drug produces significant liver improvements. The model and its outputs are enlightening, the questions it raises are clinically important. Stephen Harrison shares some recently available data on efruxifermin that suggests a positive effect for compensated cirrhotics, and questions what a drug must do to make sense for earlier stage patients.