Nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is a silent epidemic of the western world, reported to affect a quarter of the US population. Prevalence of this condition has exploded in the last two decades and continues to grow worldwide, triggered by a surge in obesity and other related risk factors. Despite the high prevalence and recent interest in the space, NAFLD is still an emerging therapeutic area with incomplete scientific understanding and an evolving clinical care paradigm. Fortunately, the academic, medical and biopharma communities are actively engaged in addressing this emerging public health issue.
NASH: Flying The Plane While Building It
Drug development for nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), a form of liver disease, is a game of incomplete information: pipeline evolution is occurring in parallel with continued efforts to better understand and manage the disease. To date, no therapy for patients with NASH has been approved and consequences of the condition can be severe, including cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma.

More from Innovation
AI-related deal activitiy in the first quarter of 2025 was punctuated by a last-minute $600m raise for Isomorphic Labs.
The process of manufacturing medicines can often be complex, expensive and harmful to the environment. Initiatives like RESILIENCE UK are seeking to simplify this process, utilizing VR technology to create a more sustainable learning environment for both students and companies.
Antag CEO Joerg Moeller talked to In Vivo about the young company’s gilded roots, and how its GIP receptor antagonist asset will differentiate in the crowded obesity market.
Farideh Bischoff, chief medical officer of Heranova Lifesciences, discusses the urgent need for better diagnostic options and the latest innovations transforming care for endometriosis patients.
More from In Vivo
AI-related deal activitiy in the first quarter of 2025 was punctuated by a last-minute $600m raise for Isomorphic Labs.
The process of manufacturing medicines can often be complex, expensive and harmful to the environment. Initiatives like RESILIENCE UK are seeking to simplify this process, utilizing VR technology to create a more sustainable learning environment for both students and companies.
Lundbeck CEO Charl van Zyl spoke with In Vivo about the Danish company’s multipronged transformation, one that involves a rethink of company culture, pipeline strategy and a sharpened focus on innovation in rare neurological disorders.