Resmetirom Approval Marks a Milestone in MASH Treatment

Metabolic Dysfunction-Associated Steatohepatitis (MASH), previously known as Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis (NASH), represents a progressive form of metabolic liver disease closely linked to obesity, type 2 diabetes, and insulin resistance. This reclassification under the broader Metabolic dysfunction-Associated Steatotic Liver Disease (MASLD) framework reflects a shift toward understanding liver disease in the context of systemic metabolic dysfunction.
MASH is characterized by hepatic steatosis, lobular inflammation, and hepatocyte injury (ballooning), with or without fibrosis. Left untreated, MASH can progress to advanced fibrosis, cirrhosis, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), and liver failure, posing a major global health burden.
Request a sample copy of the CI report at: https://www.datamintelligence.com/download-sample/metabolic-dysfunction-associated-steatohepatitis-mash-market
Redefining Disease Nomenclature and Understanding
In 2023, the terminology for fatty liver diseases was updated by expert consensus:
* NAFLD → MASLD (Metabolic dysfunction-associated Steatotic Liver Disease)
* NASH → MASH (Metabolic dysfunction-associated Steatohepatitis)
This shift moves away from exclusion-based definitions and focuses on the metabolic drivers of hepatic inflammation. MASH is now recognized as a manifestation of systemic metabolic dysfunction rather than a standalone liver disease.
Risk Factors and Pathogenesis
MASH develops through a multi-hit process driven by:
1. Insulin resistance
2. Adipose tissue dysfunction
3. Oxidative stress and lipid toxicity
4. Inflammatory cytokine signaling
5. Genetic predisposition (e.g., PNPLA3, TM6SF2 variants)
Major risk factors include:
1. Obesity (especially visceral adiposity)
2. Type 2 diabetes mellitus
3. Dyslipidemia
4. Hypertension
5. Sedentary lifestyle and poor diet
The interplay between metabolic overload, hepatic inflammation, and fibrosis underlies MASH pathogenesis, making it a systemic and progressive disease.
Epidemiology and Public Health Impact
MASH is now one of the leading causes of chronic liver disease worldwide:
1. Metric Global Estimate
2. Prevalence of MASLD ~25–30%
3. Estimated MASH prevalence ~5% globally
4. At-risk population Obese and diabetic individuals
5. Liver transplant driver Among top 3 causes in the U.S.
The disease often remains asymptomatic until advanced fibrosis or cirrhosis develops, making early identification and intervention critical.
Diagnosis: A Shift Toward Non-Invasive Strategies
While liver biopsy remains the gold standard, non-invasive diagnostic tools are increasingly used:
1. FibroScan (transient elastography)
2. MRI-PDFF, MRE (for steatosis and fibrosis)
3. Serum-based biomarkers: FIB-4, ELF, NFS
4. AI-powered risk models integrating clinical and biochemical parameters
Clinical evaluation must consider comorbidities like cardiovascular disease, the leading cause of death in MASH patients.
Therapeutic Pipeline: Addressing an Unmet Medical Need
Until recently, no medications had received regulatory approval for MASH. However, the landscape is rapidly evolving:
FDA-Approved Therapy
Resmetirom (Rezdiffra): A THR-β agonist approved in 2024 for MASH with fibrosis stages F2-F3. It reduces hepatic fat and fibrosis progression with a favorable safety profile.
Other Promising Candidates in Late-Stage Trials
* Lanifibranor (pan-PPAR agonist)
* Aramchol (SCD1 inhibitor)
* Firsocostat (ACC inhibitor)
* Semaglutide (GLP-1 agonist with metabolic and hepatic benefits)
These therapies target lipid metabolism, inflammation, and fibrosis, aiming to prevent disease progression or achieve histologic resolution.
Lifestyle Interventions Remain Foundational
Despite pharmaceutical advances, diet and exercise remain core components of MASH management:
* 7–10% body weight loss can reduce steatosis and inflammation
* Mediterranean-style diets improve hepatic and metabolic parameters
* Structured lifestyle programs offer sustainable benefits
* Combination approaches integrating lifestyle modification and targeted therapy are expected to define future care pathways.
Read the full CI Insights report:
The Road Ahead: Precision Hepatology and Real-World Access
With regulatory pathways becoming clearer, payers and policymakers face the task of ensuring equitable access.
Key future directions include:
1. Stratified care models based on fibrosis stage
2. Long-term real-world data on safety and durability
3. Combination therapy trials
4. Global screening programs in high-risk populations
5. Addressing disparities in diagnosis and treatment particularly in low-resource regions, is essential as the MASH burden rises globally.
About DataM Intelligence
DataM Intelligence 4Market Research LLP delivers real-time competitive intelligence across autoimmune, immunologic, and rare disease spaces. Our insights span clinical pipelines, regulatory benchmarks, and commercialization strategies for stakeholders in global life sciences.
🔗 Visit: www.datamintelligence.com
- Art
- Causes
- Crafts
- Dance
- Drinks
- Film
- Fitness
- Food
- Spellen
- Gardening
- Health
- Home
- Literature
- Music
- Networking
- Other
- Party
- Religion
- Shopping
- Sports
- Theater
- Wellness
