I do my best to try and post all clinical trials and all summary materials that becomes available to the public. One of the reasons that people see doctors is that "studies" and "reports" although intending to be scientific and logical, often have many holes in them. A physician is supposed to be able to critically analyze these studies. So, I'll do my best:
This particular post states:
The methodological quality was low: only 23% of the trials reported adequate allocation concealment and only 46% were considered adequately double-blinded.
The abstract also states that:
Liver-related mortality was significantly reduced by milk thistle in all trials (RR 0.50, 95% CI 0.29 to 0.88), but not in high-quality trials (RR 0.57, 95% CI 0.28 to 1.19).
Questions that come up for me are:
1) Did the mortality rates occur during the studies, or were they follow up rates of participants post study?
2) If post study, did they continue to take Milk Thistle? If so, how much? If the hepatitis was alcohol induced, did they continue to drink?
3) They do not define a high quality study, nor did they specify what the cause of death was (drugs, car accident, heart attacks?).
4) They indicated that double blind is high quality, but not what dosage was used for the studies that are "high quality." nor how ill the patients were that joined these studies.
What jumps out at me as being very positive is:
Milk thistle was not associated with a significantly increased risk of adverse events (RR 0.83, 95% CI 0.46 to 1.50).
So, to summarize, I post all studies I find. Some indicate skepticism, which is very healthy, especially where physician's are involved in making decisions for their patients. Skepticism is the foundation of good science.
In my work, I have only seen Milk Thistle benefit the liver when taken over a normal course. It does help keep the inflammation in the liver to a minimum in all studies I have read and in all clients I have worked with, and helps in detoxifying the body so those that are suffering can live a more healthy and happy life. Many studies even indicate that it protects the liver cells from toxins, helps with pancreatitis, and prostatitis, and...).
That said, there are skeptics, and the only real truth is how each person's body (and liver) responds. I hope that this answers your questions. Let me know if I did not answer your question completely.