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Supplementary material: Evaluation of emerging NASH therapies: the impact of treatment efficacy profiles on long-term health outcomes

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posted on 2024-05-02, 14:59 authored by William Herring, Ian Gould, Villum Wittrup-Jensen, Judith Ertle, Effie Kuti, Sorrel Wolowacz

These are peer-reviewed supplementary materials for the article 'Evaluation of emerging NASH therapies: the impact of treatment efficacy profiles on long-term health outcomes' published in the Journal of Comparative Effectiveness Research.

  • Model validation
  • Supplementary Table 1: Validation of predicted outcomes
  • Supplemental references

Aim: Evaluations of nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) treatments require predicting lifetime outcomes from short-term clinical trials. Materials & methods: A Markov model with NASH fibrosis stages F0–F3, NASH resolution, compensated cirrhosis (F4/CC), and liver-related complication (LRC) states was developed using literature-based standard of care (SoC) data. Hypothetical efficacy profiles were defined affecting resolution (100%-increase), fibrosis improvement (100% increase), or fibrosis worsening (50% decrease). Results: For the SoC, 10-year LRC rates increased with baseline fibrosis stage (F1: 3.0%; F2: 9.8%; F3: 27.2%; F4/CC: 64.9%). The fibrosis worsening profile reduced predicted 10-year LRC rates (F1: 1.9%; F2: 6.5%; F3: 19.1%; F4/CC: 55.0%) more than the resolution and fibrosis improvement profiles (F1: 2.6%/2.6%; F2: 8.5%/8.3%; F3: 23.3%/23.0%; F4/CC: NA/59.0%). Scenario analyses considered alternative SoC progression, treatment efficacy and treatment-stopping rules. Conclusion: Potential NASH efficacy profiles have differing impacts on predicted long-term outcomes, providing insights for future stakeholders.

Funding

The financial support for the study, including the journal’s Open Access fee, was provided by Boehringer Ingelheim International GmbH and Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

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