Dapagliflozin Shows Promise in Treating MASH and Liver Fibrosis: BMJ-Published Chinese Trial Offers New Hope

A recent clinical trial in China, published in The BMJ, has revealed that dapagliflozin, a drug commonly used to treat type 2 diabetes, shows significant potential in treating metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis (MASH) and liver fibrosis—two progressive liver conditions with limited current treatment options.

🔬 About the Study

  • Conducted at: Six Chinese medical centers
  • Timeframe: November 2018 – March 2023
  • Participants: 154 individuals with biopsy-confirmed MASH
    • Average age: 35 years
    • Male: 85%
    • Type 2 diabetes: 45%
    • Liver fibrosis staging:
      • Stage 1 – 33%
      • Stage 2 – 45%
      • Stage 3 – 19%
  • Intervention:
    • Daily 10 mg dapagliflozin vs. placebo for 48 weeks
    • Lifestyle guidance via biannual health education sessions

Participants’ body weight, blood sugar, liver enzymes, blood pressure, diet, lipids, and physical activity were monitored throughout the trial.


📈 Key Findings

  • MASH Improvement Without Worsening of Fibrosis:
    • 53% in dapagliflozin group vs. 30% in placebo
  • Resolution of MASH Without Fibrosis Worsening:
    • 23% on dapagliflozin vs. 8% on placebo
  • Fibrosis Improvement Without MASH Worsening:
    • 45% on dapagliflozin vs. 20% on placebo
  • Dropouts Due to Adverse Events:
    • Only 1% (1 participant) in dapagliflozin group
    • 3% in placebo group

🌍 Why This Matters

Liver disease is a growing global health threat, causing 2 million deaths annually (4% of all deaths). MASH, formerly known as NASH, is an advanced form of fatty liver disease marked by inflammation and scar tissue buildup (fibrosis).

  • It affects over 5% of adults globally, and up to 30% of people with diabetes or obesity
  • Up to 1 in 4 cases may progress to cirrhosis

Prior research suggested SGLT-2 inhibitors like dapagliflozin could improve liver fat, enzyme levels, and stiffness, but this is the first trial to show histological improvement in biopsy-confirmed MASH.


🧠 Bottom Line

This landmark study opens a promising new treatment avenue for MASH and liver fibrosis, especially in patients with type 2 diabetes. While further trials in larger, more diverse populations are needed to confirm these findings, dapagliflozin may soon expand beyond its role in diabetes care to become a critical tool in managing chronic liver disease.

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