quantitative
Analysis v1
62
Pro
0
Against

HIV patients with high liver enzymes who lost at least 8% visceral fat after taking tesamorelin saw their ALT drop by about 9 units on average, while those without fat loss had a slight increase, showing a clear benefit from fat reduction.

Scientific Claim

Among HIV-infected patients with elevated baseline ALT or AST (>30 U/L), those with ≥8% visceral adipose tissue reduction after tesamorelin treatment had greater reductions in alanine aminotransferase (−8.9 ± 22.6 vs. +1.4 ± 34.7 U/L, P=0.004) and aspartate aminotransferase (−3.8 ± 12.9 vs. +0.4 ± 22.4 U/L, P=0.04) compared to nonresponders after 26 weeks.

Original Statement

In subjects assigned to tesamorelin with baseline ALT or AST > 30 U/L, VAT responders experienced greater reductions in ALT (−8.9 ± 22.6 vs. 1.4 ± 34.7 U/l, P = 0.004) and AST (−3.8 ± 12.9 vs. 0.4 ± 22.4 U/l, P = 0.04) compared with nonresponders over 26 weeks.

Evidence Quality Assessment

Claim Status

appropriately stated

Study Design Support

Design supports claim

Appropriate Language Strength

association

Can only show association/correlation

Assessment Explanation

The study design allows for association claims but cannot confirm causation due to unknown blinding. The language appropriately reflects the evidence.

Evidence from Studies

Supporting (1)

62

Contradicting (0)

0
No contradicting evidence found