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Survodutide, an investigational dual glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) and glucagon receptor agonist, led to “exceptional improvement in disease activity and fibrosis” in patients with metabolic dysfunction–associated steatohepatitis (MASH), according to phase 2 results presented here at the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) Congress 2024.

The data were simultaneously published in The New England Journal of Medicine .

The primary endpoint data, reported earlier this year in a press release, showed that up to 83% of participants on survodutide showed a statistically significant improvement in MASH compared with those on placebo (18.2%) based on paired biopsy results.

In addition, 75% of patients treated with survodutide experienced resolution of MASH with no worsening of fibrosis compared with 15% of patients on placebo, and in patients with F2/F3 fibrosis, 64.5% achieved improvement in fibrosis without worsening of MASH, reported Arun J. Sanyal, MD, principal study investigator and director of the Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) Stravitz-Sanyal Institute for Liver Disease and Metabolic Health, VCU School of Medicine, Richmond, Virginia.

Dr. Arun J. Sanyal, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia
American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases
Dr. Arun J. Sanyal

What’s so amazing is that this “exceptional improvement” is after 48 weeks of therapy with a class of molecule that is already known to also have cardiometabolic benefits, Dr. Sanyal said in an interview.

“At the highest dose of survodutide [6.0 mg], two thirds of patients in whom we have biopsy data, at both the beginning and the end, actually showed fibrosis regression within 48 weeks,” he said. “This is pretty dramatic.”
 

Efficacy and Safety of Survodutide

A total of 293 participants with biopsy-confirmed MASH and fibrosis stages F1-F3 were randomly assigned (1:1:1:1) to receive once-weekly subcutaneous injections of survodutide 2.4 mg (n = 73), 4.8 mg (n = 72), or 6.0 mg (n = 74) or placebo (n = 74).

Around half of study participants were women, with mean age around 50 years and a body mass index around 35 kg/m2. Overall, 26%-30% had type 2 diabetes, 24%-36% had F2 fibrosis, and 23%-30% had F3 fibrosis. The total Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease Activity Score was 5.2.

After completing a 24-week rapid-dose-escalation phase, participants followed a 24-week maintenance phase. Histologic improvement (reduction) in MASH without worsening of fibrosis after 48 weeks of treatment comprised the primary endpoint, whereas a reduction in liver fat content by at least 30% and biopsy-assessed reduction in fibrosis by at least one stage were among the secondary endpoints.

The main analyses of the trial were based on two treatment sets: Actual treatment (the actual dose received at the start of the maintenance phase; per protocol) and planned treatment (the maintenance dose assigned to participants at randomization). Dr. Sanyal mainly reported results based on actual treatment, which were used for the primary analysis.

The overall primary endpoint data, including nonresponders, showed a 47% improvement in MASH in the 2.4-mg treatment group, 62% in the 4.8 mg group, and 43% in the 6.0-mg group compared with 13.5% in the placebo group (P < .001).

In addition, 50% of patients on 2.4- and 6-mg doses experienced a statistically significant improvement in fibrosis (F1-F3) without worsening of MASH. In patients with F2/F3 fibrosis, 64.5% of participants in the 6-mg survodutide group showed improvement vs 25.9% in the placebo group.

Reduction in liver fat by at least 30% was achieved by up to 87% in the 6-mg group according to MRI-estimated proton density fat fraction; when nonresponders were included, the percentage was 76.9% of the 6-mg group. Other outcomes included weight loss and reductions in A1c.

The results did not differ markedly between doses, which “is really exciting news,” Dr. Sanyal said.

Patients who are intolerant of the highest dose can switch to a lower dose without a big loss of efficacy, he said, adding that even the low dose was sufficient to get near maximal glucagon effect.

Adverse events were similar between survodutide and placebo, except for gastrointestinal events, including nausea, diarrhea, and vomiting. The occurrence of serious adverse events also was similar between survodutide and placebo.

Discontinuation due to adverse events was 20% across all the survodutide groups (with 16% due to gastrointestinal events) vs 3% in the placebo group.
 

 

 

Dual Agonist vs Monoagonist Therapy

The dual agonist approach may confer clinical advantages over GLP-1 receptor monoagonist pharmacotherapies for MASH.

“GLP has no receptors in the liver, so all its effects are mediated outside the liver, particularly for weight loss and improvement in metabolic status, increase in insulin secretion and sensitivity, and overall systemic glycemia,” Dr. Sanyal explained.

“People with established fibrosis take longer to respond in terms of downstream liver scarring with extrahepatic changes alone,” he added.

With “glucagon directly targeting the liver, we believe this reduces oxidative stress and possibly stimulates FGF-21 secretion [liver-derived factor that regulates lipid and glucose metabolism] in the liver, so there are likely multiple mechanisms driving the antifibrogenic benefits,” Dr. Sanyal said.

In comparison, the study authors highlighted that data on the GLP-1 receptor monoagonist semaglutide suggest a significantly higher proportion of patients on semaglutide achieve MASH resolution than those on placebo but that it does not result in “a significantly higher percentage of patients with improvement in fibrosis stage.

“It might be that it takes longer to get an effect in the liver with semaglutide,” Dr. Sanyal said.

By year-end, we’ll know how the GLP-1 alone approach (eg, semaglutide) and the dual agonist approach work, and we’ll eventually have data on triple agonists, Dr. Sanyal added.
 

The Burden of Liver Disease

Comoderator Debbie Shawcross, MBBS, PhD, professor of hepatology and chronic liver failure, King’s College, London, England, remarked on the importance of new drugs, including survodutide, in reducing the burden of steatotic liver disease.

Approximately one third of the world’s population and between 7% and 9% of children have steatotic liver disease, she noted. The buildup of fat causes inflammation and scarring of the liver, which may then progress to liver cirrhosis and primary liver cancers.

Survodutide offers much hope “as a drug that will reduce both liver inflammation and scarring, while also providing the benefit of improved diabetic control,” Dr. Shawcross said.

Reflecting on the dual agonism, she said that both the glucagon and GLP-1 receptors are critical to controlling metabolic functions.

Survodutide is currently being investigated in five phase 3 studies for people living with overweight and obesity, both of which are associated with MASH. There is also a trial looking at people with overweight/obesity with confirmed or presumed diagnosis of MASH, according to a company press release.

Dr. Sanyal reported grants, consultancy fees, and speaker fees from a wide range of companies working in the field of liver medicine. Dr. Shawcross reported no conflicts in relation to this drug and advisory board membership/consultancy for EnteroBiotix, Norgine, Satellite Bio, and MRN Health.
 

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Survodutide, an investigational dual glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) and glucagon receptor agonist, led to “exceptional improvement in disease activity and fibrosis” in patients with metabolic dysfunction–associated steatohepatitis (MASH), according to phase 2 results presented here at the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) Congress 2024.

The data were simultaneously published in The New England Journal of Medicine .

The primary endpoint data, reported earlier this year in a press release, showed that up to 83% of participants on survodutide showed a statistically significant improvement in MASH compared with those on placebo (18.2%) based on paired biopsy results.

In addition, 75% of patients treated with survodutide experienced resolution of MASH with no worsening of fibrosis compared with 15% of patients on placebo, and in patients with F2/F3 fibrosis, 64.5% achieved improvement in fibrosis without worsening of MASH, reported Arun J. Sanyal, MD, principal study investigator and director of the Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) Stravitz-Sanyal Institute for Liver Disease and Metabolic Health, VCU School of Medicine, Richmond, Virginia.

Dr. Arun J. Sanyal, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia
American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases
Dr. Arun J. Sanyal

What’s so amazing is that this “exceptional improvement” is after 48 weeks of therapy with a class of molecule that is already known to also have cardiometabolic benefits, Dr. Sanyal said in an interview.

“At the highest dose of survodutide [6.0 mg], two thirds of patients in whom we have biopsy data, at both the beginning and the end, actually showed fibrosis regression within 48 weeks,” he said. “This is pretty dramatic.”
 

Efficacy and Safety of Survodutide

A total of 293 participants with biopsy-confirmed MASH and fibrosis stages F1-F3 were randomly assigned (1:1:1:1) to receive once-weekly subcutaneous injections of survodutide 2.4 mg (n = 73), 4.8 mg (n = 72), or 6.0 mg (n = 74) or placebo (n = 74).

Around half of study participants were women, with mean age around 50 years and a body mass index around 35 kg/m2. Overall, 26%-30% had type 2 diabetes, 24%-36% had F2 fibrosis, and 23%-30% had F3 fibrosis. The total Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease Activity Score was 5.2.

After completing a 24-week rapid-dose-escalation phase, participants followed a 24-week maintenance phase. Histologic improvement (reduction) in MASH without worsening of fibrosis after 48 weeks of treatment comprised the primary endpoint, whereas a reduction in liver fat content by at least 30% and biopsy-assessed reduction in fibrosis by at least one stage were among the secondary endpoints.

The main analyses of the trial were based on two treatment sets: Actual treatment (the actual dose received at the start of the maintenance phase; per protocol) and planned treatment (the maintenance dose assigned to participants at randomization). Dr. Sanyal mainly reported results based on actual treatment, which were used for the primary analysis.

The overall primary endpoint data, including nonresponders, showed a 47% improvement in MASH in the 2.4-mg treatment group, 62% in the 4.8 mg group, and 43% in the 6.0-mg group compared with 13.5% in the placebo group (P < .001).

In addition, 50% of patients on 2.4- and 6-mg doses experienced a statistically significant improvement in fibrosis (F1-F3) without worsening of MASH. In patients with F2/F3 fibrosis, 64.5% of participants in the 6-mg survodutide group showed improvement vs 25.9% in the placebo group.

Reduction in liver fat by at least 30% was achieved by up to 87% in the 6-mg group according to MRI-estimated proton density fat fraction; when nonresponders were included, the percentage was 76.9% of the 6-mg group. Other outcomes included weight loss and reductions in A1c.

The results did not differ markedly between doses, which “is really exciting news,” Dr. Sanyal said.

Patients who are intolerant of the highest dose can switch to a lower dose without a big loss of efficacy, he said, adding that even the low dose was sufficient to get near maximal glucagon effect.

Adverse events were similar between survodutide and placebo, except for gastrointestinal events, including nausea, diarrhea, and vomiting. The occurrence of serious adverse events also was similar between survodutide and placebo.

Discontinuation due to adverse events was 20% across all the survodutide groups (with 16% due to gastrointestinal events) vs 3% in the placebo group.
 

 

 

Dual Agonist vs Monoagonist Therapy

The dual agonist approach may confer clinical advantages over GLP-1 receptor monoagonist pharmacotherapies for MASH.

“GLP has no receptors in the liver, so all its effects are mediated outside the liver, particularly for weight loss and improvement in metabolic status, increase in insulin secretion and sensitivity, and overall systemic glycemia,” Dr. Sanyal explained.

“People with established fibrosis take longer to respond in terms of downstream liver scarring with extrahepatic changes alone,” he added.

With “glucagon directly targeting the liver, we believe this reduces oxidative stress and possibly stimulates FGF-21 secretion [liver-derived factor that regulates lipid and glucose metabolism] in the liver, so there are likely multiple mechanisms driving the antifibrogenic benefits,” Dr. Sanyal said.

In comparison, the study authors highlighted that data on the GLP-1 receptor monoagonist semaglutide suggest a significantly higher proportion of patients on semaglutide achieve MASH resolution than those on placebo but that it does not result in “a significantly higher percentage of patients with improvement in fibrosis stage.

“It might be that it takes longer to get an effect in the liver with semaglutide,” Dr. Sanyal said.

By year-end, we’ll know how the GLP-1 alone approach (eg, semaglutide) and the dual agonist approach work, and we’ll eventually have data on triple agonists, Dr. Sanyal added.
 

The Burden of Liver Disease

Comoderator Debbie Shawcross, MBBS, PhD, professor of hepatology and chronic liver failure, King’s College, London, England, remarked on the importance of new drugs, including survodutide, in reducing the burden of steatotic liver disease.

Approximately one third of the world’s population and between 7% and 9% of children have steatotic liver disease, she noted. The buildup of fat causes inflammation and scarring of the liver, which may then progress to liver cirrhosis and primary liver cancers.

Survodutide offers much hope “as a drug that will reduce both liver inflammation and scarring, while also providing the benefit of improved diabetic control,” Dr. Shawcross said.

Reflecting on the dual agonism, she said that both the glucagon and GLP-1 receptors are critical to controlling metabolic functions.

Survodutide is currently being investigated in five phase 3 studies for people living with overweight and obesity, both of which are associated with MASH. There is also a trial looking at people with overweight/obesity with confirmed or presumed diagnosis of MASH, according to a company press release.

Dr. Sanyal reported grants, consultancy fees, and speaker fees from a wide range of companies working in the field of liver medicine. Dr. Shawcross reported no conflicts in relation to this drug and advisory board membership/consultancy for EnteroBiotix, Norgine, Satellite Bio, and MRN Health.
 

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Survodutide, an investigational dual glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1) and glucagon receptor agonist, led to “exceptional improvement in disease activity and fibrosis” in patients with metabolic dysfunction–associated steatohepatitis (MASH), according to phase 2 results presented here at the European Association for the Study of the Liver (EASL) Congress 2024.

The data were simultaneously published in The New England Journal of Medicine .

The primary endpoint data, reported earlier this year in a press release, showed that up to 83% of participants on survodutide showed a statistically significant improvement in MASH compared with those on placebo (18.2%) based on paired biopsy results.

In addition, 75% of patients treated with survodutide experienced resolution of MASH with no worsening of fibrosis compared with 15% of patients on placebo, and in patients with F2/F3 fibrosis, 64.5% achieved improvement in fibrosis without worsening of MASH, reported Arun J. Sanyal, MD, principal study investigator and director of the Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) Stravitz-Sanyal Institute for Liver Disease and Metabolic Health, VCU School of Medicine, Richmond, Virginia.

Dr. Arun J. Sanyal, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia
American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases
Dr. Arun J. Sanyal

What’s so amazing is that this “exceptional improvement” is after 48 weeks of therapy with a class of molecule that is already known to also have cardiometabolic benefits, Dr. Sanyal said in an interview.

“At the highest dose of survodutide [6.0 mg], two thirds of patients in whom we have biopsy data, at both the beginning and the end, actually showed fibrosis regression within 48 weeks,” he said. “This is pretty dramatic.”
 

Efficacy and Safety of Survodutide

A total of 293 participants with biopsy-confirmed MASH and fibrosis stages F1-F3 were randomly assigned (1:1:1:1) to receive once-weekly subcutaneous injections of survodutide 2.4 mg (n = 73), 4.8 mg (n = 72), or 6.0 mg (n = 74) or placebo (n = 74).

Around half of study participants were women, with mean age around 50 years and a body mass index around 35 kg/m2. Overall, 26%-30% had type 2 diabetes, 24%-36% had F2 fibrosis, and 23%-30% had F3 fibrosis. The total Nonalcoholic Fatty Liver Disease Activity Score was 5.2.

After completing a 24-week rapid-dose-escalation phase, participants followed a 24-week maintenance phase. Histologic improvement (reduction) in MASH without worsening of fibrosis after 48 weeks of treatment comprised the primary endpoint, whereas a reduction in liver fat content by at least 30% and biopsy-assessed reduction in fibrosis by at least one stage were among the secondary endpoints.

The main analyses of the trial were based on two treatment sets: Actual treatment (the actual dose received at the start of the maintenance phase; per protocol) and planned treatment (the maintenance dose assigned to participants at randomization). Dr. Sanyal mainly reported results based on actual treatment, which were used for the primary analysis.

The overall primary endpoint data, including nonresponders, showed a 47% improvement in MASH in the 2.4-mg treatment group, 62% in the 4.8 mg group, and 43% in the 6.0-mg group compared with 13.5% in the placebo group (P < .001).

In addition, 50% of patients on 2.4- and 6-mg doses experienced a statistically significant improvement in fibrosis (F1-F3) without worsening of MASH. In patients with F2/F3 fibrosis, 64.5% of participants in the 6-mg survodutide group showed improvement vs 25.9% in the placebo group.

Reduction in liver fat by at least 30% was achieved by up to 87% in the 6-mg group according to MRI-estimated proton density fat fraction; when nonresponders were included, the percentage was 76.9% of the 6-mg group. Other outcomes included weight loss and reductions in A1c.

The results did not differ markedly between doses, which “is really exciting news,” Dr. Sanyal said.

Patients who are intolerant of the highest dose can switch to a lower dose without a big loss of efficacy, he said, adding that even the low dose was sufficient to get near maximal glucagon effect.

Adverse events were similar between survodutide and placebo, except for gastrointestinal events, including nausea, diarrhea, and vomiting. The occurrence of serious adverse events also was similar between survodutide and placebo.

Discontinuation due to adverse events was 20% across all the survodutide groups (with 16% due to gastrointestinal events) vs 3% in the placebo group.
 

 

 

Dual Agonist vs Monoagonist Therapy

The dual agonist approach may confer clinical advantages over GLP-1 receptor monoagonist pharmacotherapies for MASH.

“GLP has no receptors in the liver, so all its effects are mediated outside the liver, particularly for weight loss and improvement in metabolic status, increase in insulin secretion and sensitivity, and overall systemic glycemia,” Dr. Sanyal explained.

“People with established fibrosis take longer to respond in terms of downstream liver scarring with extrahepatic changes alone,” he added.

With “glucagon directly targeting the liver, we believe this reduces oxidative stress and possibly stimulates FGF-21 secretion [liver-derived factor that regulates lipid and glucose metabolism] in the liver, so there are likely multiple mechanisms driving the antifibrogenic benefits,” Dr. Sanyal said.

In comparison, the study authors highlighted that data on the GLP-1 receptor monoagonist semaglutide suggest a significantly higher proportion of patients on semaglutide achieve MASH resolution than those on placebo but that it does not result in “a significantly higher percentage of patients with improvement in fibrosis stage.

“It might be that it takes longer to get an effect in the liver with semaglutide,” Dr. Sanyal said.

By year-end, we’ll know how the GLP-1 alone approach (eg, semaglutide) and the dual agonist approach work, and we’ll eventually have data on triple agonists, Dr. Sanyal added.
 

The Burden of Liver Disease

Comoderator Debbie Shawcross, MBBS, PhD, professor of hepatology and chronic liver failure, King’s College, London, England, remarked on the importance of new drugs, including survodutide, in reducing the burden of steatotic liver disease.

Approximately one third of the world’s population and between 7% and 9% of children have steatotic liver disease, she noted. The buildup of fat causes inflammation and scarring of the liver, which may then progress to liver cirrhosis and primary liver cancers.

Survodutide offers much hope “as a drug that will reduce both liver inflammation and scarring, while also providing the benefit of improved diabetic control,” Dr. Shawcross said.

Reflecting on the dual agonism, she said that both the glucagon and GLP-1 receptors are critical to controlling metabolic functions.

Survodutide is currently being investigated in five phase 3 studies for people living with overweight and obesity, both of which are associated with MASH. There is also a trial looking at people with overweight/obesity with confirmed or presumed diagnosis of MASH, according to a company press release.

Dr. Sanyal reported grants, consultancy fees, and speaker fees from a wide range of companies working in the field of liver medicine. Dr. Shawcross reported no conflicts in relation to this drug and advisory board membership/consultancy for EnteroBiotix, Norgine, Satellite Bio, and MRN Health.
 

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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