Artificial intelligence scoring of liver biopsies in a phase II trial of semaglutide in nonalcoholic steatohepatitis.
Hepatology · 2024
Last updated 2026-05-28In a study of 251 people with liver disease, a machine-learning model and pathologists both found that a higher percentage of those taking a 0.4 mg dose of semaglutide had improved liver biopsy results after 72 weeks compared to those taking a placebo (58.5% vs. 22.0% for pathologists, and 36.9% vs. 11.9% for the model). The machine-learning model also detected a measurable reduction in liver scarring with the 0.4 mg dose that was not found using traditional methods.
AI summary of the abstract below.
| Journal | Hepatology, 2024 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 29 |
| Relative citation ratio | 4.94 |
| NIH percentile | 92 |
| Molecules | semaglutide |
| Conditions studied | Mash |
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Artificial intelligence-powered digital pathology offers the potential to quantify histological findings in a reproducible way. This analysis compares the evaluation of histological features of NASH between pathologists and a machine-learning (ML) pathology model.
APPROACH AND RESULTS: This post hoc analysis included data from a subset of patients (n=251) with biopsy-confirmed NASH and fibrosis stage F1-F3 from a 72-week randomized placebo-controlled trial of once-daily subcutaneous semaglutide 0.1, 0.2, or 0.4 mg (NCT02970942). Biopsies at baseline and week 72 were read by 2 pathologists. Digitized biopsy slides were evaluated by PathAI's NASH ML models to quantify changes in fibrosis, steatosis, inflammation, and hepatocyte ballooning using categorical assessments and continuous scores. Pathologist and ML-derived categorical assessments detected a significantly greater percentage of patients achieving the primary endpoint of NASH resolution without worsening of fibrosis with semaglutide 0.4 mg versus placebo (pathologist 58.5% vs. 22.0%, p < 0.0001; ML 36.9% vs. 11.9%; p =0.0015). Both methods detected a higher but nonsignificant percentage of patients on semaglutide 0.4 mg versus placebo achieving the secondary endpoint of liver fibrosis improvement without NASH worsening. ML continuous scores detected significant treatment-induced responses in histological features, including a quantitative reduction in fibrosis with semaglutide 0.4 mg versus placebo ( p =0.0099) that could not be detected using pathologist or ML categorical assessment.
CONCLUSIONS: ML categorical assessments reproduced pathologists' results of histological improvement with semaglutide for steatosis and disease activity. ML-based continuous scores demonstrated an antifibrotic effect not measured by conventional histopathology.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 38112484 ↗
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