
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
S6 - E5.2 - Newsmaker: Naga Chalasani on Real-World Experience Prescribing Resmetirom
This weekend’s Newsmaker, Indiana University hepatologist and key opinion leader Naga Chalasani, joins Roger Green to discuss Early Experience with Resmetirom To Treat Metabolic-Associated Steatohepatitis with Fibrosis in a Real-World Setting, an article his group published recently in Hepatology Communications. He shares highlights from the paper and points out the one key area in which his group found room for improvement in their initial protocol.
Naga and colleagues wrote this paper after learning from Madrigal Pharmaceuticals that they were among the largest early prescribers of resmetirom and, relative to others, had achieved reimbursement with virtually all their patients and a high percentage of patients actually starting the medication. After receiving requests from other states for advice, the group decided to author this paper.
In the paper, Naga and colleagues focused on patient selection, care pathway, how IUHealth got the medicine to their patients, and experience with safety and tolerability.
In the paper, Naga and colleagues discuss their experiences in prescribing resmetirom for 113 patients in the first seven months after resmetirom's approval. Of these, IUHealth succeeded in achieving reimbursement for 110 of them. Of these patients, 83 initiated therapy, and 16% of those discontinued.
In this interview, Naga shares some of the decisions that made the group so successful in the first three areas and identifies one subsequent area where the group found an opportunity for improvement: systematic follow-up with patients after prescribing. He attributes the 16% discontinuation rate to a "prescribe and forget" policy, similar to one that was successful in HCV, where clinicians prescribed without systematic follow-up until blood levels were obtained three months later. With a "prescribe and follow up" policy that includes phone calls at 1 and 3 months, he anticipates discontinuation rates will fall to something akin to the 5% rate in Phase 3 trials.
What makes this interview so fascinating is Naga's description of the thinking that went behind specific decisions the group made in terms of patient management and pathway and suggests other options that might work as well. In all, this interview provides an excellent guide for clinics and providers on how to best integrate resmetirom into their practices.