NASH Liver Disease Finally Has a Drug — After Decades of Failures

After more than two decades of clinical failures, dead-end trials, and billions of dollars spent chasing a treatment that never materialized, NASH liver...

After more than two decades of clinical failures, dead-end trials, and billions of dollars spent chasing a treatment that never materialized, NASH liver disease finally has an approved drug. In March 2024, the FDA granted accelerated approval to Rezdiffra (resmetirom), made by Madrigal Pharmaceuticals, for adults with noncirrhotic NASH who have moderate-to-advanced liver fibrosis (stages F2–F3). It is the first and only medication ever approved for this condition — a milestone that liver specialists had nearly stopped believing would come. The drug has since received conditional marketing authorization from the European Commission as well, making it the first approved MASH therapy on both sides of the Atlantic.

For readers of this site, the relevance is not abstract. Liver disease and brain health are more connected than most people realize. NASH — now officially renamed MASH, as part of a 2023 effort to drop the stigmatizing “nonalcoholic” label — drives systemic inflammation, insulin resistance, and vascular damage that researchers have increasingly linked to cognitive decline and dementia risk. A drug that can reverse liver fibrosis may, over time, reduce one of the quieter upstream threats to brain health. This article covers the science behind Rezdiffra, why so many drugs failed before it, what the clinical data actually shows, the cost and access realities, and what the next few years of development look like.

Table of Contents

Why Did It Take Decades to Get a Drug for NASH Liver Disease?

The history of NASH drug development is a graveyard of promising candidates. For over twenty years, pharmaceutical companies poured resources into clinical trials that repeatedly came up empty. Elafibranor, a PPARα/δ agonist, failed to hit its primary endpoint. Obeticholic acid, an FXR agonist that once looked like the frontrunner, stumbled on safety and efficacy concerns. Selonsertib went through two negative Phase III trials before being abandoned. The pattern was so consistent that some researchers began questioning whether the disease could be treated pharmacologically at all. The reasons for these failures were not simple bad luck.

NASH is a disease defined by patient heterogeneity — the people who have it vary enormously in their underlying metabolic profiles, genetic predispositions, and rates of disease progression. The condition moves slowly, sometimes over decades, which makes it brutally difficult to show meaningful change within a typical trial window. Diagnosis has historically required invasive liver biopsies, creating enrollment barriers and dropout problems. And placebo response rates have been stubbornly high, sometimes above 10%, muddying the statistical waters. Compare this to a condition like hepatitis C, where viral clearance offers a clean binary endpoint, and you begin to see why NASH was such a uniquely difficult target. The Lancet Gastroenterology & Hepatology has documented this long arc of failure in detail, and the consensus view by the early 2020s was cautious at best. Rezdiffra did not emerge from a sudden breakthrough — it came from a mechanism (thyroid hormone receptor-beta agonism) that had been explored for years but that Madrigal refined with enough precision to finally clear the regulatory bar.

Why Did It Take Decades to Get a Drug for NASH Liver Disease?

What Does the Clinical Evidence for Rezdiffra Actually Show?

The pivotal data comes from the Phase 3 MAESTRO-NASH trial, and the numbers deserve a careful look rather than a glancing headline. Among patients taking the 100 mg dose, 29.9% achieved NASH resolution without worsening fibrosis, compared to 9.7% on placebo — a statistically significant difference (P<0.001). The 80 mg dose showed a 25.9% resolution rate. For fibrosis improvement of at least one stage without worsening of the overall NASH activity score, the results were 25.9% for the 100 mg group and 24.2% for the 80 mg group, versus 14.2% on placebo (P<0.001 for both). These numbers are meaningful, but they come with an important caveat: roughly 70% of patients on the drug did not achieve NASH resolution, and about 74% did not see a full stage of fibrosis improvement. This is not a cure.

It is a treatment that works for a meaningful subset of patients, which is exactly the profile that led to an accelerated — not full — approval. The FDA’s continued approval is contingent on the ongoing MAESTRO-NASH-OUTCOMES trial, with data expected in 2027, which will need to demonstrate actual clinical outcomes like reduced progression to cirrhosis, liver transplant, or death. However, there is additional encouraging data beyond the fibrosis and resolution endpoints. Rezdiffra produced significant reductions in LDL cholesterol — down 13.6% at 80 mg and 16.3% at 100 mg by week 24, versus essentially no change on placebo. For a patient population that overwhelmingly carries cardiovascular risk, this is a notable secondary benefit. And in November 2025, Madrigal presented two-year data from the MAESTRO-NAFLD-1 cirrhosis arm at the AASLD Liver Meeting, showing significant improvements in liver stiffness, fat content, fibrosis biomarkers, and portal hypertension risk scores among 122 patients — suggesting the drug’s effects may extend, with further study, to more advanced disease.

Rezdiffra Phase 3 MAESTRO-NASH Results: NASH Resolution RatesPlacebo9.7%Rezdiffra 80mg25.9%Rezdiffra 100mg29.9%Source: New England Journal of Medicine

The NASH-to-Brain Connection — Why This Matters for Cognitive Health

The liver-brain axis is not a metaphor. It is a set of measurable biological pathways through which chronic liver inflammation contributes to neuroinflammation, cerebrovascular damage, and ultimately cognitive impairment. MASH drives persistent elevation of inflammatory cytokines, worsens insulin resistance — itself a well-established risk factor for Alzheimer’s disease — and accelerates atherosclerosis in vessels that supply the brain. Consider a 58-year-old patient with metabolic syndrome, Stage F2 liver fibrosis, borderline diabetes, and early subjective cognitive complaints. This is not a rare clinical profile. Roughly 25% of U.S. The NASH-to-Brain Connection — Why This Matters for Cognitive Health

What Does Rezdiffra Cost, and Can Patients Actually Access It?

The wholesale acquisition cost of Rezdiffra is $47,400 per year, or roughly $4,000 per month at list price. For a chronic condition affecting millions of Americans, that number raises immediate questions about who will actually be able to use it. The answer depends heavily on insurance coverage and assistance programs. For commercially insured patients, Madrigal has established a patient assistance program that can bring the out-of-pocket cost down to as low as $10 per month. Medicare Part D beneficiaries are now capped at $2,000 per year in total out-of-pocket drug spending under provisions of the Inflation Reduction Act, which provides a meaningful ceiling — though $2,000 per year is still a significant expense for many seniors on fixed incomes.

The tradeoff is stark: without treatment, MASH can progress to cirrhosis, liver cancer, and the need for transplantation, which carries costs in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. But “it could be worse” is cold comfort to a patient staring at a pharmacy bill they cannot afford today. Early adoption data suggests the access barriers are not insurmountable for many patients. As of the third quarter of 2025, Madrigal reported that over 29,500 patients were on Rezdiffra, with more than 10,000 prescribers writing for it. Quarterly sales were annualizing above $1 billion. Those numbers indicate real-world uptake, not just clinical curiosity — though they also reflect the reality that the patients accessing the drug first tend to be those with better insurance coverage and specialist access.

The Naming Change from NASH to MASH — and Why It Matters More Than You Think

In 2023, a consortium of international liver disease organizations officially renamed NASH to MASH (metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis) and NAFLD to MASLD (metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease). The primary motivation was to remove the word “nonalcoholic,” which had been part of the condition’s name since the 1980s and carried stigma that both patients and physicians found counterproductive. The old name defined the disease by what it was not — not caused by alcohol — rather than by what it was: a metabolic condition driven by insulin resistance, obesity, and related factors. This is not merely a semantic exercise. The old terminology created real clinical confusion and, in some cases, delayed diagnosis.

Patients who drank moderately were sometimes told they could not have NAFLD, even though metabolic liver disease and alcohol-related liver disease can coexist. Physicians in primary care settings — where MASH is most commonly encountered but least consistently screened for — reported that the “nonalcoholic” framing made it harder to have direct conversations with patients about metabolic risk. The new nomenclature aligns the disease with its actual pathophysiology and, importantly, with the metabolic syndrome framework that connects it to cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and cognitive decline. However, the naming transition has also created a period of confusion for patients researching their own condition. Search engines, patient forums, insurance coding systems, and even some clinical guidelines still use the old terminology interchangeably with the new. Anyone reading about MASH should understand that it is the same condition previously called NASH — the biology has not changed, only the label.

The Naming Change from NASH to MASH — and Why It Matters More Than You Think

What Is in the Pipeline Beyond Rezdiffra?

Rezdiffra is first, but it is not intended to be the final word. Madrigal itself is developing an oral GLP-1 receptor agonist, designated MGL-2086, specifically designed for combination therapy with Rezdiffra. Clinical trials for this combination are expected to begin in the first half of 2026.

The logic is straightforward: GLP-1 agonists like semaglutide have shown dramatic effects on weight loss and metabolic parameters, and combining that mechanism with Rezdiffra’s thyroid hormone receptor-beta activity could address MASH from two complementary angles — metabolic correction and direct hepatic fibrosis reduction. This combination approach reflects a growing consensus that MASH, like many complex metabolic diseases, will ultimately require more than a single drug to treat optimally. The 70% of patients who do not achieve NASH resolution on Rezdiffra alone represent an enormous unmet need that monotherapy may never fully address.

Where This Goes from Here

The next major inflection point is the MAESTRO-NASH-OUTCOMES trial, with data expected in 2027. That study will determine whether Rezdiffra’s histological improvements — the fibrosis reduction and NASH resolution seen on biopsy — translate into actual reductions in cirrhosis progression, liver-related death, and the need for transplantation. If the outcomes data is positive, it will convert the current accelerated approval into full approval and likely broaden insurance coverage substantially. If it falls short, the drug’s future becomes uncertain despite its commercial momentum.

For the brain health community, the broader trajectory matters as much as any single drug. The metabolic epidemic driving MASH is the same one driving the rising prevalence of vascular dementia and contributing to Alzheimer’s risk. Every advance in treating metabolic liver disease is, in a real sense, an advance in reducing the systemic burden that threatens cognitive function over a lifetime. Rezdiffra is not a brain drug. But the metabolic fire it helps put out does not stop at the liver.

Conclusion

After twenty years of failure, the approval of Rezdiffra marks a genuine turning point for the tens of millions of Americans living with MASH. The clinical data is solid if not spectacular — roughly one in four to one in three patients sees meaningful improvement in fibrosis or disease resolution — and the drug’s secondary benefits on cholesterol and its emerging data in cirrhosis patients add to its clinical profile. Real-world adoption has been rapid, with nearly 30,000 patients on therapy within about eighteen months of approval. For anyone managing metabolic risk factors alongside concerns about long-term brain health, the takeaway is this: liver disease is not a separate problem.

It is part of the metabolic continuum that includes cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and cognitive decline. Treating MASH effectively — whether with Rezdiffra, lifestyle modification, or future combination therapies — is not just about the liver. It is about reducing the systemic inflammation and metabolic dysfunction that threaten every organ downstream, including the brain. Talk to a hepatologist or your primary care physician about screening if you have risk factors, and do not wait for symptoms. By the time MASH causes symptoms, it has usually been doing damage for years.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between NASH and MASH?

They are the same condition. In 2023, international liver disease organizations renamed NASH (nonalcoholic steatohepatitis) to MASH (metabolic dysfunction-associated steatohepatitis) to remove the stigmatizing “nonalcoholic” term and better reflect the metabolic nature of the disease. NAFLD was similarly renamed to MASLD.

Is Rezdiffra a cure for NASH/MASH?

No. In clinical trials, approximately 26–30% of patients achieved NASH resolution and about 24–26% saw fibrosis improvement by at least one stage. It is a treatment that helps a meaningful subset of patients, but the majority do not achieve full resolution on the drug alone.

How much does Rezdiffra cost out of pocket?

The list price is approximately $47,400 per year. However, commercially insured patients may pay as low as $10 per month through Madrigal’s patient assistance program. Medicare Part D patients are capped at $2,000 per year in out-of-pocket drug costs under the Inflation Reduction Act.

Who is eligible for Rezdiffra?

The FDA approved Rezdiffra for adults with noncirrhotic NASH/MASH who have moderate-to-advanced liver fibrosis, specifically stages F2 and F3. It is not currently approved for patients with cirrhosis (stage F4), though studies in that population are ongoing.

Does NASH/MASH affect brain health?

Directly, MASH is a liver disease. However, the metabolic dysfunction that drives it — chronic inflammation, insulin resistance, dyslipidemia, and vascular damage — is increasingly linked by research to elevated risk of cognitive decline and dementia. Treating the metabolic syndrome underlying MASH may have indirect benefits for long-term brain health.

Are there other drugs being developed for MASH?

Yes. Madrigal is developing an oral GLP-1 receptor agonist (MGL-2086) for combination use with Rezdiffra, with clinical trials expected in the first half of 2026. Multiple other companies are also pursuing MASH therapies, though none beyond Rezdiffra have yet received FDA approval.


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