GLPwatch

LIVERAGE™: A Study to Test Whether Survodutide Helps People With a Liver Disease Called NASH/MASH Who Have Moderate or Advanced Liver Fibrosis

NCT06632444 · Recruiting

Last updated 2026-05-28

This clinical trial is testing whether the drug survodutide can help people with a liver disease called MASH (Metabolic Dysfunction Associated Steatohepatitis) who also have moderate or advanced liver scarring.

Status Recruiting Currently enrolling participants.
Phase Phase 3 Confirms effectiveness in a large group before approval.
Type Interventional (clinical trial)
Design Randomized, double-blind treatment study
Participants 1,800 people Planned (estimated).
Who can join Ages 18+ · all sexes
Timeline Started 2024-09 · est. completion 2031-12
Where 525 sites · Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium, Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Chile, China, Czechia, France, Georgia, Germany, Hungary, India, Italy, Japan, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Malaysia, Mexico, Netherlands, New Zealand, Poland, Puerto Rico, Romania, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, South Africa, South Korea, Spain, Switzerland, Taiwan, Turkey (Türkiye), United Kingdom, United States

What this study is testing ClinicalTrials.gov NCT06632444 ↗

Description as written by the study sponsor.

This study is open to adults who are at least 18 years old living with obesity and have: * a confirmed liver disease called non-alcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH)/metabolic associated steatohepatitis (MASH) and * moderate or advanced liver fibrosis People with a history of acute or chronic liver diseases other than MASH or chronic alcohol intake cannot take part in this study. The purpose of this study is to find out whether a medicine called survodutide helps people with MASH and moderate or advanced liver fibrosis improve their liver function. This study has 2 parts. The purpose of the first part of this study is to find out the effect of survodutide on MASH and liver fibrosis. The purpose of the second part is to find out how safe and effective survodutide is in improving liver function. Participants are put into 2 groups randomly, which means by chance. 1 group gets survodutide and 1 group gets placebo. Placebo looks like survodutide but does not contain any medicine. Each participant has twice the chance of getting survodutide. Participants and doctors do not know who is in which group. Participants inject survodutide or placebo under their skin once a week. The survodutide doses are slowly increased until the target dose is reached. All participants receive counselling to make changes to their diet and to exercise regularly. Participants are in the study for up to 7 years. During this time, they regularly visit the study site or have remote visits by video call. For about the first year of the study, participants have these visits every 2 weeks, increasing to every 4 weeks and then every 6 weeks. After being in the study for a little over a year participants will then alternate between visiting the study site or having a remote visit every 3 months until the end of the study. The doctors check participants' health and take note of any unwanted effects. The participants' body weight and effects on the stomach and intestines are regularly measured. At some visits the liver is measured using different imaging methods. At 2 or 3 visits doctors take a small sample of liver tissue (biopsy). The participants also fill in questionnaires about their symptoms and quality of life. The results are compared between the groups to see whether the treatment works.

Treatments tested

Main thing measuredPart 1: Resolution of MASH without worsening of liver fibrosis on MASH Clinical Research Network (CRN) fibrosis score
SponsorBoehringer Ingelheim
Conditions studiedMetabolic Dysfunction Associated Steatohepatitis (MASH), Liver Fibrosis
GLP-1 drugs survodutide

Full protocol, eligibility, and contacts on ClinicalTrials.gov NCT06632444 ↗