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NON-ALCOHOLIC FATTY LIVER DISEASE INCLUSION INTO NATIONAL

PREVENTION PROGRAM LIKELY TO REDUCE NASH PREVALENCE IN INDIA, SAYS GLOBALDATA

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Non- alcoholic fatty liver disease ( NAFLD) is emerging as an important cause of a wide spectrum of liver diseases including non- alcoholic steatohepa­titis ( NASH) in India. A proactive focus on NAFLD if translated into action can halt its prognosis to NASH, thereby reducing its prevalence in the country, says GlobalData, a leading data and analytics company.

In February 2021, India launched operationa­l guidelines to integrate NAFLD with the National Programme for Prevention & Control of Cancer, Diabetes, Cardiovasc­ular Diseases and Stroke ( NPCDCS).

Ms. Sasmitha Sahu, Pharma Analyst at GlobalData, comments: “Identifica­tion of diseases with high prevalence but with limited or no pharmacoth­erapeutic options and working towards prevention and management is a rational strategy. Control of the risk factors for NAFLD like obesity, diabetes or prediabete­s will naturally delay or evade the prognosis to more complicate­d liver conditions like NASH, cirrhosis, and cancer.

It is known that the national program already focusses on the prevention of obesity and diabetes through early detection and lifestyle changes, which can be optimized to achieve common goals for NAFLD as well. Moreover, the involvemen­t of government will ensure proper disseminat­ion of informatio­n.”

According to GlobalData Epidemiolo­gy and Market Size Database, the number of total prevalent cases of NAFLD in India is expected to grow at an annual growth rate ( AGR) of 3.23% from nearly 409 million cases in 2020 to 512 million cases in 2029 while the same for NASH is expected to increase at an AGR of 3.05% from nearly 19 million in 2020 to 24 million in 2029.

Ms. Sahu adds: “India has the second highest incidence of NAFLD within the AsiaPacifi­c region after China. The wide gap between the total prevalent and diagnosed cases highlights the need for increased screening, physician awareness, and identifica­tion of advanced fibrosis, which is characteri­stic of NASH, from simple steatosis.”

According to GlobalData Pharma Intelligen­ce Center, the diagnosis rate for NAFLD in India was 36.83% in 2020 while it was 41% among the 16 major pharmaceut­ical markets (16MM*).

Ms. Sahu adds: “Usually NAFLD/ NASH are silent indication­s with a few or no symptoms. Imaging and biomarker screening can be used as primary tools for predicting predisposi­tion to NASH from NAFLD and in ensuring that atrisk patients do not potentiall­y miss out on disease management guidance. Physician and patient education about the relation between these indication­s can play a critical role in improving diagnosis rates.”

Moreover, India became the first country to approve an innovative therapy, saroglitaz­ar Mg (Lipaglyn), a dual peroxisome proliferat­or activated receptor α/ γ agonist for NAFLD in December 2020, following an approval for NASH in March 2020.

Ms. Sahu concludes: “Until now there was no approved therapy for NAFLD/ NASH globally and patients had to rely only on generic offlabel therapies. India's promptness in approving an innovative therapy will further complement the way NAFLD is managed in the country at the diagnosis stage itself, thereby reducing overall prognosis and incidence rates for NASH.”

* 16MM = The US, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, the UK, Japan, Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, India, Mexico, Russia, South Africa and South Korea.

 ?? Source: GlobalData Pharma Intelligen­ce Centre ??
Source: GlobalData Pharma Intelligen­ce Centre
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