Randomized, Controlled Trial of the FGF21 Analogue Pegozafermin in NASH
University of California San Diego · Virginia Commonwealth University · +10 more institutions
Abstract
Pegozafermin is a long-acting glycopegylated (pegylated with the use of site-specific glycosyltransferases) fibroblast growth factor 21 (FGF21) analogue in development for the treatment of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) and severe hypertriglyceridemia. The efficacy and safety of pegozafermin in patients with biopsy-proven noncirrhotic NASH are not well established.
In this phase 2b, multicenter, double-blind, 24-week, randomized, placebo-controlled trial, we randomly assigned patients with biopsy-confirmed NASH and stage F2 or F3 (moderate or severe) fibrosis to receive subcutaneous pegozafermin at a dose of 15 mg or 30 mg weekly or 44 mg once every 2 weeks or placebo weekly or every 2 weeks. The two primary end points were an improvement in fibrosis (defined as reduction by ≥1 stage, on a scale from 0 to 4, with higher stages indicating greater severity), with no worsening of NASH, at 24 weeks and NASH resolution without worsening of fibrosis at 24 weeks. Safety was also assessed.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 61.86
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 29
Authors
17- RLRohit LoombaCorresponding
University of California San Diego
- AJArun J. Sanyal
Virginia Commonwealth University, University of California San Diego
- KVKris V. Kowdley
University of California San Diego, Liver Institute Northwest
- DLDeepak L. Bhatt
Mount Sinai Health System, University of California San Diego, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
- NANaim Alkhouri
University of California San Diego, Arizona Liver Health
Topics & keywords
- FGF21
- Randomized controlled trial
- Medicine
- Internal medicine
- Fibroblast growth factor
- Good health and well-being