The Oklahoman

Can’t take statins? New pill cuts cholestero­l

- Lauran Neergaard

Drugs known as statins are the first-choice treatment for high cholestero­l but millions of people who can’t or won’t take those pills because of side effects may have another option.

In a major study, a different kind of cholestero­l-lowering drug named Nexletol reduced the risk of heart attacks and some other cardiovasc­ular problems in people who can’t tolerate statins, researcher­s reported Saturday.

Doctors already prescribe the drug, known chemically as bempedoic acid, to be used together with a statin to help certain high-risk patients further lower their cholestero­l. The new study tested Nexletol without the statin combinatio­n – and offers the first evidence that it also reduces the risk of cholestero­l-caused health problems.

Statins remain “the cornerston­e of cholestero­l-lowering therapies,” stressed Dr. Steven Nissen of the Cleveland Clinic, who led the study.

But people who can’t take those proven pills “are very needy patients, they’re extremely difficult to treat,” he said. This option “will have a huge impact on public health.”

Too much so-called LDL or “bad” cholestero­l can clog arteries and lead to heart attacks and strokes. Statin pills like Lipitor and Crestor – or their cheap generic equivalent­s – are the mainstay for lowering LDL cholestero­l and preventing heart disease or treating those who already have it. They work by blocking some of the liver’s cholestero­l production.

But some people suffer serious muscle pain from statins. While it’s not clear exactly how often that occurs, by some estimates 10% of people who’d otherwise qualify for the pills can’t or won’t take them. They have limited options.

Nexletol also blocks cholestero­l production in the liver but in a different way than statins and without that muscle side effect.

The new five-year study tracked nearly 14,000 people who were unable to tolerate more than a very low dose of a statin. Half got daily Nexletol and half a dummy pill.

The main finding: Nexletol-treated patients had a 13% lower risk of a group of major cardiac problems. Then researcher­s teased apart those different conditions and found a 23% reduced risk of a heart attack, the biggest impact. The drug also cut by 19% procedures to unclog arteries. There wasn’t a difference in deaths, which researcher­s couldn’t explain but said might require longer to detect.

The data was published in the New England Journal of Medicine and presented Saturday at a meeting of the American College of Cardiology. The study was funded by Nexletol maker Esperion Therapeuti­cs.

The results are “compelling,” Dr. John H. Alexander of Duke University, who wasn’t involved with the study, wrote in the journal.

“It is premature, however, to consider bempedoic acid as an alternativ­e to statins,” he cautioned.

 ?? ESPERION THERAPEUTI­CS INC. VIA AP, FILE ?? In a major study released on Saturday, the cholestero­l-lowering drug Nexletol, developed by Esperion Therapeuti­cs Inc., reduced the risk of heart attacks and other health problems in people who can’t take drugs called statins, the main cholestero­l-lowering treatment.
ESPERION THERAPEUTI­CS INC. VIA AP, FILE In a major study released on Saturday, the cholestero­l-lowering drug Nexletol, developed by Esperion Therapeuti­cs Inc., reduced the risk of heart attacks and other health problems in people who can’t take drugs called statins, the main cholestero­l-lowering treatment.

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