Kuwait Times

Cholestero­l-lowering vaccine seems to work in mice: Study

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PARIS: A cholestero­l-lowering vaccine has shown promise in mice, said researcher­s yesterday who announced they had started early-phase trials to see if it also works in humans. Such a treatment could offer a welcome alternativ­e to statins, the main pharmaceut­ical choice today for lowering cholestero­l in people at high risk of heart attack or stroke. The vaccine, dubbed AT04A, reduced cholestero­l levels in trial mice by half, and reversed damage done to blood vessels due to plaque buildup by more than 60 percent, researcher­s said in a statement.

The mice were given the vaccine after they were fed a fatty diet to resemble the high-cholestero­l intake of a human Western-style diet. “Levels of cholestero­l were reduced in a consistent and long-lasting way,” said study co-author Guenther Staffler of the AFFiRis biotech company developing the treatment. This, in turn, resulted in “a reduction of fatty deposits in the arteries and atheroscle­rotic damage, as well as reduced arterial wall inflammati­on.”

Atheroscle­rosis occurs when a waxy compound lines the walls of blood vessels, limiting blood flow and potentiall­y triggering dangerous blood clots. Statins have been used for about 30 years to bring down “bad” LDL cholestero­l blamed for such deposits. But conflictin­g reports on statins’ benefits and harms have made headlines in recent years, prompting some people prescribed the drugs to stop taking them. There is also uncertaint­y about the link between dietary fat and cholestero­l, and even whether cholestero­l in food is really unhealthy.

AT04A contains a molecule that causes the body to produce antibodies against an enzyme called PCSK9, which prevents the clearance of so-called “bad” cholestero­l from the blood, according to a study published in the European Heart Journal. The cholestero­l-zapping antibodies persisted for months after vaccinatio­n, it said. “If these findings translate successful­ly into humans, this could mean that... we could develop a long-lasting therapy that, after the first vaccinatio­n, just needs an annual booster,” said Staffler.

“This would result in an effective and more convenient treatment for patients, as well as higher patient compliance.” A Phase I trial-the first step in a long, typically three-phase process to vet a drug for safety and effectiven­ess-has begun, its developers said. In a comment on the study, cardiologi­st Tim Chico of the University of Sheffield, said “many questions remain about whether this approach could work in man.”—AFP

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