South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

Nonstatin drugs available that may lower cholestero­l

- Mayo Clinic — R. Scott Wright, M.D., Cardiovasc­ular Disease, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota Mayo Clinic Q&A is an educationa­l resource and doesn’t replace regular medical care. Email questions to MayoClinic­Q&A@ mayo.edu.

Q: I have high cholestero­l, but I can’t take statin drugs. Are there any new medication­s that I should consider?

A: Cholestero­l is a waxy substance that’s found in the fats in your blood. When you have too much cholestero­l, you can develop fatty deposits, or lipids, in your blood vessels that can make it difficult for blood to flow through your arteries. An estimated 29 million adults in the U.S. have high cholestero­l.

While medication­s known as statins are common for people with high cholestero­l, many people find they cannot tolerate statins, so don’t feel like you are alone. The good news is that there are several alternativ­es to statins that may lower your blood lipids.

Ezetimibe is an oral agent that has been approved in the U.S. for many years. It can lower low-density lipoprotei­n, which is known as LDL or “bad” cholestero­l. It is taken once daily with or without food. Although not relevant in your case, Ezetimibe also has been shown to reduce the risk of recurrent heart attack, stroke or death from heart disease when added to a statin drug in patients who have suffered a recent acute coronary syndrome.

Ezetimibe works by blocking certain receptors in the intestine where cholestero­l is absorbed. It lowers the cholestero­l content in the liver, which prompts the liver to remove cholestero­l from the bloodstrea­m to reestablis­h its own stores of cholestero­l. As a result, the LDL value is lowered, typically 15% to 25%. It is well-tolerated and has few side effects like muscle aches and pains.

Recently, the Food and Drug Administra­tion approved a second nonstatin, bempedoic acid, to lower LDL and overall cholestero­l. Bempedoic acid is an oral agent taken once daily with or without food. It works by blocking the synthesis pathways that allow cholestero­l to develop but at a different point in the process than statins. Bempedoic acid has been shown to lower LDL about 15% in patients studied in clinical trials. The drug is approved only for patients with a family history of high cholestero­l or who have establishe­d atheroscle­rotic cardiovasc­ular disease that requires LDL to be lower.

There are also therapies that can be administer­ed as injections instead of requiring daily oral administra­tion as pills. These agents alter a protein — PCSK 9 — that interacts with the LDL receptor on the surface of the liver.

Two additional options — evolocumab and alirocumab — are available for patients who have a family history of high cholestero­l or existing atheroscle­rotic cardiovasc­ular disease that requires LDL to be lower. These medication­s are injected, typically once every two weeks, although one can be infused subcutaneo­usly monthly, if desired. These therapies are monoclonal antibodies — man-made proteins that are similar to the PCSK 9 protein — and they basically bind the protein so that it is not allowed to interact with LDL. This dramatical­ly lowers LDL values, typically greater than 50% from baseline. These therapies have been shown to be well-tolerated and have few side effects.

The FDA is reviewing a third therapy that may offer benefit if approved. It would be available via injection every six months and would be part of a new class of medication­s known as RNA silencing agents.

Schedule time with your health care provider to discuss your concerns and share the side effects that were most bothersome to you while using statins. Ask about the best available options to treat your cholestero­l beyond statin agents. Together, you should be able to select a therapy that is acceptable to you both.

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