Metformin-phytochemical combination therapy in metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease: mechanistic insights and therapeutic potential.
Amri J, Karimpour A, Meshkani R
Medicinal Plants
Milk thistle growing along your fence or in a sunny patch of disturbed soil has been producing silymarin for millennia — and researchers are now finding it can amplify the effects of mainstream medications against one of today's most widespread liver diseases.
Fatty liver disease is hard to treat because it involves so many different biological problems at once. Scientists found that combining a standard diabetes drug with natural compounds extracted from plants — like milk thistle, soy, barberry, and grapes — tackled more of those problems simultaneously than either approach alone. In every animal study reviewed, the plant-drug combination did a better job of reducing liver fat, calming inflammation, and preventing scarring.
Key Findings
Metformin-phytochemical combinations consistently outperformed monotherapy across all eligible animal studies, reducing liver fat, oxidative stress, and inflammatory markers more effectively.
Seven specific plant compounds — berberine (barberry), silymarin (milk thistle), genistein (soy), malvidin (grape), morin (mulberry), chlorogenic acid (coffee/artichoke), and p-coumaric acid — showed the strongest synergistic benefits.
Combination therapy also improved gut-liver axis signaling and cellular cleanup (autophagy) — effects largely absent with the drug used alone.
chevron_right Technical Summary
A review of animal studies found that pairing metformin — a common diabetes drug — with plant-derived compounds outperforms either treatment alone for fatty liver disease, covering inflammatory, metabolic, and fibrotic pathways the drug alone cannot reach. Compounds from plants including milk thistle, soy, barberry, and grapes showed the strongest combined effects.
Abstract Preview
Metabolic dysfunction-associated steatotic liver disease (MASLD) is a multifactorial metabolic disorder characterized by excessive hepatic lipid accumulation, insulin resistance, oxidative stress, ...
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