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THE NASH Tsunami audience came to know Jörn Schattenberg in the Fall of 2020 when he shared a paper he had recently co-authored on why NASH drug trials failed. This week, the same group that discussed that paper – Jörn, Stephen Harrison, Louise Campbell and Roger Green – reflect on what has improved in the intervening time period and what has not. The group speculates what can still be accomplished.
This conversation begins with Roger suggesting that tertiary care research universities that have their own primary practice be utilized as an accessible point of referral. The group agrees that while a good idea, this may not translate to the European system.
Roger poses the closing question: what is there to look forward to in the space of NASH clinical trials and improving screen fail rates in the next 6 months to a year? Louise is looking for the approval of FibroScan for primary care in the UK. Jörn is hoping for an opportunity to offer health care services through referral systems. Stephen talks about getting a drug approved. In response to the latter, Roger finishes with a Stephen quote: is the juice worth the squeeze? This "juice" takes forms of cash and optimism, and it will be worth the squeeze if a drug sees successful development.
By SurfingNASH.com3.9
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Send us a text
THE NASH Tsunami audience came to know Jörn Schattenberg in the Fall of 2020 when he shared a paper he had recently co-authored on why NASH drug trials failed. This week, the same group that discussed that paper – Jörn, Stephen Harrison, Louise Campbell and Roger Green – reflect on what has improved in the intervening time period and what has not. The group speculates what can still be accomplished.
This conversation begins with Roger suggesting that tertiary care research universities that have their own primary practice be utilized as an accessible point of referral. The group agrees that while a good idea, this may not translate to the European system.
Roger poses the closing question: what is there to look forward to in the space of NASH clinical trials and improving screen fail rates in the next 6 months to a year? Louise is looking for the approval of FibroScan for primary care in the UK. Jörn is hoping for an opportunity to offer health care services through referral systems. Stephen talks about getting a drug approved. In response to the latter, Roger finishes with a Stephen quote: is the juice worth the squeeze? This "juice" takes forms of cash and optimism, and it will be worth the squeeze if a drug sees successful development.

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