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Resmetirom for Advanced Fatty Liver
For the first time, there's a pill that bends the trajectory of advanced fatty liver disease. Resmetirom — sold as Rezdiffra, FDA-approved in March 2024 — is the first drug to clear the bar of reversing both the liver inflammation and the scarring of MASH on biopsy at one year. The catch: about one in three patients responds, the list price is roughly $47,000 a year, and the proof it actually prevents cirrhosis and liver failure is still being collected. What follows is what the drug does, who it's for, what it costs in money and side effects, and how to think about it next to the alternatives.
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The headline number is longevity: this is the first drug aimed squarely at stopping severe fatty liver disease before it turns into cirrhosis. The taking-it part is easy — one pill a day, with or without food. The paying-for-it part is hard — a list price near a new car each year, mostly absorbed by insurance when it works. And you won't feel much: MASH is mostly silent, and so is its reversal. This is a long game, played with lab numbers and scans, not a drug you notice working.

Fatty liver disease at the F2 or F3 scarring stage is a slow-motion problem with one root cause: the liver has been storing too much fat for too long, the fat-soaked cells become inflamed and injured, and the repair machinery lays down scar tissue. Resmetirom acts on the part of the liver-cell machinery that decides how much fat to burn and how much to keep Karanjia et al. 2024.

The trick is selectivity. Thyroid hormone is a powerful fat-clearing signal, but using it whole-body would speed up your heart, thin your bones, and cause every other thyroid side effect along the way. Resmetirom is shaped to land mostly in the liver, and only on the one thyroid-hormone switch that controls fat handling — not the one in the heart and bones Harrison et al. 2019. So the liver gets the message to burn its own fat stores, clear cholesterol from the blood, and stop laying down new fat. The rest of the body barely notices the drug is there.

Over months, the downstream effect is what you'd expect from less stored fat in liver cells: less inflammation, less injury, and — eventually — less new scar tissue being laid down.

What the trial actually showed

The approval rests on one large, well-run study called MAESTRO-NASH Harrison et al. 2024. It is the first time any drug has cleared the bar that regulators set for fatty liver disease: improve both the inflammation and the scarring, measured by a pathologist reading a liver biopsy, after one year on the drug.

Translated: at the better dose, roughly one in three people on the drug clears the disease at a year, and one in four shows their scarring move back one stage. That is honest, useful, and not a miracle. About two-thirds of patients don't hit those benchmarks at one year — some take longer, some don't respond.

The other side of the trial is what's still unknown. Biopsy improvement is what the FDA calls a surrogate endpoint — a marker we strongly believe predicts the things that actually matter (cirrhosis, liver failure, transplant, death from liver disease) but haven't yet seen the drug change directly. The same study is following the same patients for up to 54 months to answer that question, with results expected around 2027–2028 FDA 2024. The approval is "accelerated" because regulators decided the biopsy result was good enough to start prescribing while that confirmation was being collected.

Why this matters now, not in ten years

Significant fatty liver scarring is a deceptively quiet condition. The liver does not have pain nerves on the inside; you don't feel the inflammation, you don't feel the scarring, and you don't feel the slow drift from "fatty liver" to "scarred liver" to "cirrhosis." A blood test usually catches it accidentally. Most people get diagnosed at the late physical where their primary-care doctor mentions, in passing, that the liver enzymes have been creeping up Younossi et al. 2023.

The forecast without treatment is statistical, not dramatic. A typical patient at F3 scarring faces, on average, about a 5–10% chance per year of progressing to cirrhosis. Once cirrhosis lands, the annual risk of a serious event — internal bleeding, fluid in the abdomen, mental confusion from liver failure, or liver cancer — sits around 3–5%. None of this is felt until it is — and then it is felt all at once, in a hospital. MASH is now the leading reason for liver transplant in U.S. women Younossi et al. 2023.

Stakes for the typical person reading this aren't about today's energy or tomorrow's bloodwork. They're about whether the next FibroScan in two years shows the same number, or a worse one — and what that means for the decade that follows.

How it's taken

The drug is a pill, swallowed once a day, with or without food. The dose is set by your body weight at the start — no titration, no escalation, no timing tricks. You take the same dose every day from day one.

Before the first prescription, your doctor needs proof you actually have the disease the drug is approved for. In practice that means either a liver biopsy or a non-invasive workup — usually a FibroScan plus a blood-based scarring score — pointing at F2 or F3 scarring. The drug is not labelled for milder fatty liver (F0–F1) or for cirrhosis (F4) Madrigal 2024.

One real-world watch-out: resmetirom interacts with some common drugs through liver-handling enzymes. Strong interactions with high-dose statins, the gout/cholesterol drug gemfibrozil, and the antiplatelet drug clopidogrel can either change resmetirom levels or push liver enzymes up. Your doctor will adjust statin doses if needed and avoid the harder interactions Madrigal 2024.

When not to take it

The label's main monitoring concern is the liver itself. Liver enzyme bumps were more common on resmetirom than on placebo, and at low rates the bumps were large enough to count as drug-caused liver injury. The drug is held if enzymes climb past five times the upper end of normal, or if symptoms of liver trouble appear Madrigal 2024. None of this is a reason not to start when the indication fits — it's a reason to keep up with the bloodwork the prescriber asks for.

What else is on the table

Resmetirom is the first drug for MASH-with-scarring, but it is not the only option. The honest ranking, in roughly the order most hepatologists would consider:

  • Weight loss of 7–10% of body weight. Still the single most effective thing anyone can do for this disease. A landmark biopsy study followed 261 patients who actually lost the weight: roughly nine in ten cleared MASH at that threshold Vilar-Gomez et al. 2015. The catch is in the word "actually" — sustaining a 10% weight loss for a year is hard, and most people don't.
  • The new obesity drugs. Semaglutide (Wegovy/Ozempic) and tirzepatide (Mounjaro/Zepbound) drive the weight loss the previous bullet describes, and probably reverse MASH directly on top of that. Tirzepatide cleared MASH in roughly half to two-thirds of patients in a mid-stage trial Loomba et al. 2024; semaglutide showed similar resolution rates earlier Newsome et al. 2021. Neither is yet FDA-approved specifically for MASH, but both are widely used in the same patient — most of whom have obesity, diabetes, or both.
  • Bariatric surgery. The most reliable trigger of MASH and scarring reversal, when the patient qualifies. Up-front cost and risk are real; long-term effect is substantial.
  • Pioglitazone and vitamin E. Older, cheaper, modestly effective. Recommended by liver-specialty guidelines in specific patients — pioglitazone for biopsy-confirmed MASH in patients with type 2 diabetes, vitamin E for the same indication without diabetes Rinella et al. 2023. Pioglitazone causes weight gain and small bone effects; high-dose vitamin E has a small prostate-cancer signal in men.

The realistic clinical picture: weight loss first, with a GLP-1-class drug helping if needed, and resmetirom layered on for patients who already have significant scarring and need a liver-specific lever — or for patients in whom weight loss is not happening and the scarring is moving.

What this drug is not

  • It is not a thyroid pill. Despite acting on a thyroid-hormone switch, at the approved doses it does not change your TSH, your free T4, your heart rate, or your weight. If you take levothyroxine, you almost certainly do not need to adjust it Harrison et al. 2024.
  • It is not a cure. About one in three patients reaches "MASH cleared" on biopsy at one year. That number is real, and it is also the first time any pharmaceutical has reached it — but the other two-thirds didn't, and even the responders need monitoring.
  • It is not a replacement for losing weight. Every participant in the pivotal trial was counseled on diet and exercise; the drug's effect sits on top of that, not instead of it. The patients who get the most out of resmetirom are usually the ones who haven't been able to sustain the 7–10% weight loss that would otherwise do most of the work.
  • Approval does not mean long-term benefit is proven. Accelerated approval is conditional on the longer outcomes trial reading out. The biopsy improvement is strongly suggestive of fewer cirrhosis cases over a decade — but "strongly suggestive" is not the same as "proven," and the proof is still being collected FDA 2024.

What it costs and how to get it

The U.S. list price at launch sits around $47,400 a year — roughly $3,950 a month ICER 2024. Almost nobody pays that out of pocket. Most commercially insured patients pay something closer to $10 a month through the manufacturer's copay program, and a patient-assistance program covers some uninsured patients who meet income criteria. Medicare Part D coverage has been the bigger fight; some plans cover, some require steep prior authorisation.

The independent cost-effectiveness watchdog ICER reviewed resmetirom in 2024 and concluded the launch price needed roughly a 30–60% discount to be confidently worth it at standard willingness-to-pay benchmarks — and that the whole cost-effectiveness case is conditional on the long-term outcomes trial showing fewer cirrhosis cases ICER 2024. The drug is not a bad deal — it's the first one ever for the disease — but it is an expensive one, and the price math is contested.

The prescription itself goes through hepatology or gastroenterology in most U.S. systems. A typical workup before the first script: FibroScan (with the elastography number, not just the ultrasound), a blood-based scarring score (FIB-4 or ELF), a lipid panel, basic liver and kidney chemistry, a thyroid blood test, an alcohol history, and a careful medication review. Some payors require a liver biopsy on top of all that, despite the FDA label not asking for one.

Outside the U.S., as of 2026, the drug is not yet approved in Europe, the UK, or Japan. Patients there access it through clinical trials, compassionate-use pathways, or direct private import — all of which involve their own costs and friction.

Where it goes wrong

  • Quitting in the first month. Diarrhea and nausea hit roughly a quarter of patients in the opening weeks, against a placebo background of about fifteen percent Harrison et al. 2024. It's usually mild and usually fades by week eight, but plenty of people stop before they get there. Warn yourself in advance that the first weeks are the worst weeks and you'll stick.
  • Adherence on a silent disease. You don't feel the drug working. You don't feel the disease either. A daily pill against nothing you can feel is a hard psychological setup; the people who keep taking it are usually the ones who internalised what the next FibroScan represents.
  • Drug-drug surprises with statins. The interaction is real, and it can drive liver enzymes up high enough to look like a resmetirom problem when it's actually a statin-dose problem. The fix is a dose adjustment by the prescriber, not stopping the resmetirom.
  • Insurance denials on biopsy grounds. The label doesn't require a biopsy. Many U.S. payors do. A FibroScan plus the right blood-based score is often enough to win the prior authorisation, but it takes work — and a hepatology office that knows the appeal language.
  • Treating the drug as the whole plan. Resmetirom plus an unchanged diet, unchanged weight, and unchanged exercise pattern still works on the biopsy — but it works better when the lifestyle pieces are moving too, and the lifestyle pieces affect cardiovascular outcomes the drug can't reach.

What changes if it works

If you are one of the responders, here is what the next few years actually look like.

  • Weeks one to eight. The most noticeable change is the side-effect curve — looser stools, occasional nausea — flattening out. Nothing about your energy, appearance, or daily life shifts. The liver enzymes on the next blood draw are quietly lower.
  • Month three to month six. A repeat lipid panel shows your LDL cholesterol down by something like fifteen percent without changing your statin Harrison et al. 2024. Your hepatologist mentions, casually, that the numbers look good. You still don't feel any different.
  • Year one. A repeat FibroScan (or, in a research setting, a repeat biopsy) shows less liver fat and, in roughly a quarter of responders, less scarring than the year before. This is the data point the drug exists for. From the patient's chair, it is a number on a screen — but it is the first time that number has moved in the helpful direction in most patients' charts.
  • Year two and beyond. The bet — and it is still a bet, until the long-term trial reads out — is that the FibroScan that would have crept upward into cirrhosis territory instead stays flat or improves. The thing you don't experience is the hospital admission for liver failure or the transplant referral you'd otherwise have eventually had a meaningful chance of getting Younossi et al. 2023.

This is not a drug with a felt payoff. The payoff is a quieter doctor's-appointment cycle, a steadier set of numbers, and — if the trial reads out the way the mechanism predicts — a future that doesn't include the parts of fatty-liver disease that hurt.

Adjacent topics worth knowing about: the new obesity drugs (semaglutide and tirzepatide) and what they do for fatty liver on top of weight; non-invasive liver-scarring measurement (FibroScan, FIB-4, ELF) for catching the disease before it gets to F2 or F3; cardiovascular risk in metabolic disease, which usually kills these patients sooner than the liver does; and bariatric surgery for the subset of patients who qualify and want a one-time intervention rather than a daily pill.

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