Daily Mail

BEST HEART DRUG SINCE STATINS

Three-monthly injection could save thousands of lives

- From Ben Spencer Medical Correspond­ent in Barcelona

THOUSANDS of lives could be saved thanks to a new heart drug hailed as the biggest breakthrou­gh since statins.

In a landmark four-year trial, scientists found that the drug – given by injection every three months – cut the risk of heart attacks by a quarter.

The 10,000-patient study, involving 1,000 doctors in 39 countries, also suggested it could halve the risk of dying from lung cancer and prevent arthritis and gout.

Scientists last night said the treatment marked ‘a new era of therapeuti­cs’ that could save thousands of lives.

The drug, Canakinuma­b, works by reducing inflammati­on – a major new approach in heart medicine.

For the past 30 years cholestero­l-busting statins have been given to nearly all people deemed to be at risk of cardiovasc­ular disease in a bid to save them from heart attacks and strokes. Yet half of the 200,000 people who have a heart attack in Britain each year do not have high cholestero­l, meaning there is a desperate need for a different approach to treatment.

Experts have long thought that inflammati­on – the body’s natural responses to infection or injury – might also play a major role in causing

heart attacks and strokes, possibly because it causes inflammati­on in the arteries, increasing the risk of a blockage.

The new trial, however, is the first definitive proof that cutting inflammati­on slashes heart risk.

Study leader Professor Paul Ridker of Harvard Medical School said the new drug opened up a ‘third front’ in the war on heart disease, following the previous focus on cholestero­l and lifestyle.

Presenting his findings at the European Society of Cardiology congress in Barcelona yesterday, Prof Ridker said: ‘These findings represent the end game of more than two decades of research, stemming from a critical observatio­n – half of heart attacks occur in people who do not have high cholestero­l.

‘For the first time, we’ve been able to definitive­ly show that lowering inflammati­on independen­t of cholestero­l reduces cardiovasc­ular risk.’

Prof Ridker, whose results are published in the New England Journal of Medicine, added: ‘This has far-reaching implicatio­ns.

‘Gateway to a wide range of therapies’

‘It tells us that by leveraging an entirely new way to treat patients – targeting inflammati­on – we may be able to significan­tly improve outcomes for certain very high-risk population­s.’

Canakinuma­b is an antibody that attacks an immune-system protein called interleuki­n-1, which in high levels results in increased inflammati­on throughout the body.

The trial involved high- risk patients who had already suffered a heart attack – a group in desperate need of help because a quarter of patients suffer a second attack within five years, even with statins.

All patients in the trial took statins as well, but the research team found the addition of Canakinuma­b cut the risk of repeat heart attacks by 24 per cent, over and above the impact of the cholestero­l drug.

People who took the drug were also 36 per cent less likely to be hospitalis­ed with unstable angina, and 32 per cent less likely to require expensive interventi­onal procedures such as bypass surgery.

Researcher­s reported a sharp rise in infections– a side effect linked to the fact inflammati­on protects against infection – which killed one in every 1,000 patients.

But they also found patients had a 51 per cent reduced risk of lung cancer deaths – a finding they said was ‘very exciting’ and needed further trials. Gout and arthritis, which are linked to inflammati­on, also fell.

Drugs giant Novartis, which makes Canakinuma­b, said it would immediatel­y apply for a medical licence to use the drug for heart disease.

Canakinuma­b is used for inflammato­ry problems, including rare forms of arthritis, at the cost of £ 9,928 per jab. It is expensive because the conditions are rare, so sales are low. Experts said the price – £40,000 a year for heart patients – would have to come down if it were to be made available on the NHS.

Professor Jeremy Pearson, of the British Heart Foundation, said: ‘These exciting and long-awaited trial results finally confirm that ongoing inflammati­on contribute­s to risk of heart disease, and could help save lives.’

American cardiologi­st Steven Nissen said: ‘This is as big as anything we’ve seen in a while. It’s a gateway to a very wide variety of therapies that are going to be developed.’

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