Embracing the PPAR Agonist Era of PBC Management - Episode 1
In this video segment, Reau, Trivedi, and Hirschfield discuss recent shifts in treatment goals for patients with PBC and a new focus on timely intervention with second-line options.
In recognition of the US Food and Drug Administration accelerated approval of Gilead's seladelpar (Livdelzi) and other recent evolutions in primary biliary cholangitis (PBC), the latest HCPLive Special Report spotlights a conversation between a trio of subject matter experts on the latest advancements in PBC and their implications for disease management.
A chronic and progressive autoimmune liver disease affecting intrahepatic bile ducts, common symptoms of PBC include jaundice, pruritus, and fatigue. Ursodeoxycholic acid (UDCA) has long been the mainstay of treatment for PBC and continues to be the only first-line therapy. However, many patients do not respond to or are unable to tolerate UDCA, underscoring the need for more treatment options to prevent progression to cirrhosis and eventual liver failure as well as to improve symptoms most negatively impacting patients. In the past 3 months alone, the PBC treatment landscape has seen the addition of 2 new therapeutic options with the accelerated approvals of seladelpar and elafibranor, both of which are proliferator-activated receptor agonists shown to reduce alkaline phosphatase.
In the opening segment of our 6-part HCPLive Special Report on the evolving landscape of PBC management, moderator Nancy Reau, MD, asks Palak Trivedi, MD, PhD, and Gideon Hirschfield, PhD, MB BChir, about how treatment goals in PBC have evolved over time, to which Hirschfield describes how the historic view of PBC as a slow-progressing, chronic liver disease where the primary objective was to prevent liver failure or delay the need for transplantation has changed. Now, current approaches aim not only to prevent disease progression but also to normalize liver function tests and improve overall patient well-being.
Trivedi mentions the importance of timely intervention, noting that while historically it was acceptable to wait for gradual improvements in liver tests, the current focus is on achieving results within shorter timeframes—particularly for high-risk patients. This shift underscores the necessity of introducing second-line agents sooner if patients do not show significant improvement.