6533b836fe1ef96bd12a1366
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Determinants of fibrosis progression and regression in NASH
Rambabu SurabattulaX.-y. WangDetlef SchuppanDetlef Schuppansubject
0301 basic medicineLiver CirrhosisCirrhosisInflammationBioinformaticsCholangiocyte03 medical and health sciencesLiver disease0302 clinical medicineFibrosisNon-alcoholic Fatty Liver DiseaseClinical endpointMedicineHumansHepatologybusiness.industryDisease Managementmedicine.diseasePrognosis3. Good health030104 developmental biologyImmunologyHepatic stellate cellDisease Progression030211 gastroenterology & hepatologySteatohepatitismedicine.symptombusinessdescription
Cirrhosis has become the major liver-related clinical endpoint in non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH). However, progression to cirrhosis is less predictable in NASH than in other chronic liver diseases. This is due to the complex and multifactorial aetiology of NASH, which is determined by lifestyle and nutrition, multiple genetic and epigenetic factors, and a prominent role of hepatic and extrahepatic comorbidities. Thus, modest changes in these cofactors can also induce fibrosis regression, at least in patients with precirrhotic liver disease. Fibrogenesis in NASH correlates with, but is indirectly coupled to, classical inflammation, since fibrosis progression is driven by repetitive periods of repair. While hepatocyte lipoapoptosis is a key driving force of fibrosis progression, activated hepatic stellate cells, myofibroblasts, cholangiocytes, macrophages and components of the pathological extracellular matrix are major fibrogenic effectors and thus pharmacological targets for therapies aimed at inhibition of fibrosis progression or induction of fibrosis reversal. The advent of novel, highly sensitive and specific serum biomarkers and imaging methods to assess the dynamics of liver fibrosis in NASH will improve detection, stratification and follow-up of patients with progressive NASH . These non-invasive tools will also promote the clinical development of antifibrotic drugs, by permitting the design of lean proof-of-concept studies, and enabling development of a personalised antifibrotic therapy for patients with rapid fibrosis progression or advanced disease.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2017-10-20 | Journal of Hepatology |