Namodenoson, an A3 adenosine receptor (A3AR) agonist, shows clinical activity against nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) with or without nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), according to data from a phase II study.
This study randomized 60 patients with NAFLD (alanine aminotransferase [ALT] ≥60 IU/L) to receive oral namodenoson 12.5 mg (n=21) or 25 mg (n=19) or placebo (n=20), administered twice daily for 12 weeks. The total follow-up was 16 weeks.
The primary efficacy endpoint of serum ALT decreased over time in a dose-dependent manner in the namodenoson groups. The change from baseline (CFB) in ALT with the 25-mg namodenoson regimen at 12 weeks trended towards significance relative to placebo (p=0.066).
Likewise, there was a dose-dependent decrease in serum aspartate aminotransferase (AST) levels in the namodenoson group. Compared with placebo, the 25-mg regimen produced a clinically meaningful change in AST from baseline to 12 weeks (p=0.03).
At week 12, ALT normalized in 31.6 percent of the patients in the namodenoson 25-mg arm and in 20.0 percent in the placebo arm (p=0.405). At week 16, the proportion of patients who achieved this outcome increased to 36.8 percent in the former and decreased to 10.0 percent in the latter (p=0.038).
A3AR expression levels were stable over time across the three treatment arms. Namodenoson at either dose was well tolerated, with no drug-emergent severe adverse events (AEs), drug-drug interactions, hepatotoxicity, or deaths.
There were three AEs deemed possibly related to study treatment, namely myalgia (12.5 mg), muscular weakness (25 mg), and headache (25 mg).