The Columbus Dispatch

Cholestero­l drug worked in big study, Merck says

- By Linda A. Johnson

TRENTON, N.J. — Merck & Co. said Tuesday that a new type of cholestero­l drug reduced heart attacks, deaths and other complicati­ons of heart disease in a huge, latestage study.

The positive result was a welcome surprise because three previous experiment­al drugs of the same type had failed.

Merck’s pill, anacetrapi­b, might eventually give highrisk heart patients a new option to add to cholestero­l treatments that have helped prevent millions of heart attacks, strokes and deaths from heart disease. Cheap generics don’t cut those risks enough for many people, while two new cholestero­l drugs cost $14,000 a year or more, so insurers have been restrictin­g coverage.

The Merck drug works by blocking a protein called CETP. That’s a different way to control cholestero­l than that of widely used, nowgeneric statins such as Lipitor and Crestor, and the newer injected drugs, Repatha and Praluent.

Anacetrapi­b was thought to benefit patients mainly by increasing HDL, or “good” cholestero­l. Over time, Merck found it also significan­tly lowered “bad” cholestero­l, or LDL, increasing the drug’s ability to prevent artery-clogging buildups of fatty plaques that can trigger heart attacks and strokes.

The company-funded study included 30,000 people, who were followed for more than four years. Half got the drug and the rest got dummy pills. Both groups also took atorvastat­in pills, or generic Lipitor.

The size and duration of the study increased the chances that it would produce a positive result. Still, that might be just a modest improvemen­t, Evercore ISI analyst Umer Raffat wrote to investors Tuesday.

Kenilworth, New Jerseybase­d Merck said it won’t release detailed study results until Aug. 29, at a European conference of heart specialist­s. That’s standard practice, but Merck raised questions about how well the medicine works by noting the company will consult with outside experts before deciding whether to seek regulatory approval to sell the drug.

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