Safety signals raise concerns
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A novel, oral drug, bempedoic acid, safely cut LDL cholesterol levels by almost 20% in patients who had maxed out their statin treatment, in a pivotal trial with more than 2,000 patients. These findings were the centerpiece of a 4,000-patient-experience labeling application submitted to the Food and Drug Administration in late February 2019 for this first member of the ATP citrate lyase inhibitor class. Based on its performance, bempedoic acid seems on track for agency approval.

Aside from demonstrating safety, the efficacy goal of the CLEAR Harmony (Evaluation of Long-Term Safety and Tolerability of ETC-1002 in High-Risk Patients With Hyperlipidemia and High CV Risk) trial was to cut LDL cholesterol as an add-on to maximally tolerated statin treatment, as well as discretionary use of other lipid-lowering agents in patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.

That goal appeared to be met by the CLEAR Harmony results, as well as the results from four other studies that contributed data to the approval application filed for bempedoic acid. A clinical outcomes study is underway with more than 12,000 patients aimed at showing incremental clinical benefit from bempedoic acid on top of approved treatments for lowering LDL cholesterol, but those results are not expected until 2022. Until then, the application’s data focus on the evidence that the new drug safely lowers LDL cholesterol when used on top of existing treatments.

“Bempedoic acid provides an additional therapeutic option to safely lower LDL cholesterol in patients with high risk for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease already treated with a statin,” Kausik K. Ray, MD, said when he first reported these findings during the annual meeting of the European Society of Cardiology last August in Munich. The same results appeared in a newly released article (N Engl J Med. 2019 Mar 14;380[11]:1022-32).

Dr. Kausik K. Ray, professor of public health, University of Oxford, England
Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge News
Dr. Kausik K. Ray

Maximum recommended statin dosages exist because, for every doubling of the statin dosage, LDL cholesterol levels drop by about another 6%, but adverse events grow more common. Because bempedoic acid and other ATP citrate lyase inhibitors work via the same metabolic pathway as that of statins – HMG CoA reductase inhibitors – “we did not know whether squeezing another 20% of LDL cholesterol lowering would be tolerated. What we have clearly and reassuringly shown is it is well tolerated,” said Dr. Ray, a cardiologist and professor of public health at Imperial College, London.

The CLEAR Harmony results showed in 2,230 randomized patients that treatment with bempedoic acid cut LDL cholesterol levels by an average of 18% more compared with placebo in the intention-to-treat analysis, and by 20% in an on-treatment analysis.

By seeking U.S. marketing approval for bempedoic acid based on LDL-lowering and safety only, but without data on clinical endpoints, the company developing the drug is following a path already established by several other lipid-lowering drug classes.

Dr. Christie M. Ballantyne, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston
Dr. Christie M. Ballantyne

“Statins, ezetimibe and the PCSK9 inhibitors were all approved based on clinical trial results that showed LDL-cholesterol reductions with what the FDA judged to be acceptable safety, but without results from completed outcomes trials,” Christie M. Ballantyne, MD, a coauthor of the CLEAR Harmony study and professor and chief of cardiology at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, said in an interview.

 

 



Stephen Nicholls, MD, professor of cardiology at Monash University in Melbourne, added in an interview that “the precedent has been to conditionally approve LDL cholesterol–lowering drugs at this stage of development, based on the large body of evidence demonstrating that LDL cholesterol–lowering consistently produces clinical benefit.”

Dr. Stephen Nicholls, professor of cardiology, Monash University, Melbourne
Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge News
Dr. Stephen Nicholls


To gain more confidence that treatment with bempedoic acid exerts a benefit to patients prior to availability of clinical-outcome results, the developing company sponsored a genetic and epidemiologic study that looked at the association between naturally occurring mutations that dampen the activity of ATP citrate lyase, an enzyme that metabolically sits just upstream from HMG CoA reductase, the enzyme that statins target. Dr. Nicholls, Dr. Ray, and several other collaborators devised “genetic scores” that took into account variants of the gene that codes for ATP citrate lyase, and a separate score for HMG CoA reductase variants. Each score estimated a person’s activity for each of these enzymes. The researchers then used the scores to classify enzymatic activity in more than 650,000 people in several different databases, including more than 100,000 people with a history of major cardiovascular events.

The results showed that “genetic variants that mimic the effect of ATP citrate lyase inhibitors and statins appeared to lower plasma LDL cholesterol levels by the same mechanism of action. They were associated with nearly identical effects on the risk of cardiovascular disease and cancer per unit decrease in the LDL cholesterol level,” the investigators said in an article published concurrently with the CLEAR Harmony results (N Engl J Med. 2019 March 14;380[11]:1033-42).

Dr. Steven E. Nissen, Cleveland Clinic Foundation
Dr. Steven E. Nissen

This finding “strengthens the likelihood that an outcome trial will show benefits,” Steven E. Nissen, MD, chairman of cardiovascular medicine at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, and a lead investigator in the bempedoic acid outcomes trial, CLEAR Outcomes, said in an interview.

Dr. Nicholls noted that, on the basis of the genetic study’s results “it would seem very reasonable to extrapolate and expect that bempedoic acid should reduce cardiovascular events.”

The data reported by Dr. Ray and his associates from the CLEAR Harmony trial showed that overall, the adverse-event rates associated with bempedoic acid treatment were similar to the rates seen in patients who received placebo. But Michael V. Holmes, MD, who wrote an editorial that accompanied both reports, highlighted a few differences in the adverse event rates that concerned him. These were a statistically significant higher rate of gout and blood uric acid levels on bempedoic acid treatment compared with controls, a significantly higher rate of discontinuations because of adverse events, and nominally higher rates of death, cardiovascular death, and heart failure hospitalization, said Dr. Holmes, an epidemiologist at the University of Oxford, England.

But Dr. Nissen said that “the safety ‘signals’ involve very small numbers of patients and do not raise major concerns. The increases in gout and uric acid are worth noting, but are less weighty than the disease the drug is intended to treat: major cardiovascular events.”



Dr. Nichols added that “the large cardiovascular outcome trial will provide the opportunity to further study safety and potential side effects. I’m hesitant to overinterpret event data from a relatively small clinical trial that primarily focused on the lipid effects.”

Despite recent success of the PCSK9 inhibitors as an add-on or substitute for statin treatment of elevated LDL cholesterol, the cost of the drugs in this class has made the cardiovascular disease community eager for another alternative to statins.

“The PCSK9 inhibitors are extremely effective, but uptake has been slow due to their cost and formulary restrictions,” said Dr. Ballantyne. “Many high-risk patients continue to have persistently elevated levels of LDL cholesterol.” Bempedoic acid is “a new therapy that can help people who continue to have elevations of LDL cholesterol despite current therapies.”

CLEAR Harmony and the genetic study were sponsored by Esperion, the company developing bempedoic acid. Dr. Ray has been a consultant to several drug companies but had no other financial relationship to Esperion. Dr. Ballantyne and Dr. Nicholls have been consultants to and have received research funding from Esperion and from several other companies. Dr. Nissen is leading an Esperion-sponsored study but has no financial relationships with the company or with other companies.

SOURCEs: N Engl J Med. 2019 Mar 14;380[11]:1022-32 and 1033-42.

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The primary endpoint of bempedoic acid’s safety, assessed by means of the incidence of adverse events and changes in safety laboratory variables during the CLEAR Harmony trial, did not differ meaningfully between the bempedoic acid group and the placebo group. However, patients in the bempedoic acid group had an excess risk of adverse events leading to discontinuation of the blinded trial regimen, an excess risk of gout, and higher blood concentrations of uric acid than those in the placebo group.

In further analyses of nonprimary and secondary endpoints, there were additional potentially troubling signals, although the 95% confidence intervals were wide: 0.9% of the patients treated with bempedoic acid died, compared with 0.3% of those in the placebo group; 0.4% and 0.1%, respectively, died from adjudicated cardiovascular disease; and 0.6% and 0.1%, respectively, were hospitalized for heart failure. Although the findings are potentially alarming, the imprecision that is reflected in the 95% confidence intervals renders the relative risk values virtually meaningless, but can these effect estimates be unseen?

The cumulative data from randomized treatment trials and from studies of human genetics say that, for a given reduction in the LDL cholesterol level, drugs that inhibit ATP citrate lyase and do not have off-target effects ought to yield reductions in the risk of cardiovascular disease that are similar to those achieved with statins. However, analysis of endpoints in treatment trials for which there is marginal statistical power is best avoided. Fortunately for bempedoic acid, an ongoing phase 3, cardiovascular outcome trial will provide additional information.

More broadly, the genetic characterization of drug targets is set to revolutionize how we develop medicines.

Michael V. Holmes, MD, is an epidemiologist at the University of Oxford, England. He made these comments in a published editorial (N Engl J Med. 2019 Mar 14;380[11]:1076-9). He had no disclosures.

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The primary endpoint of bempedoic acid’s safety, assessed by means of the incidence of adverse events and changes in safety laboratory variables during the CLEAR Harmony trial, did not differ meaningfully between the bempedoic acid group and the placebo group. However, patients in the bempedoic acid group had an excess risk of adverse events leading to discontinuation of the blinded trial regimen, an excess risk of gout, and higher blood concentrations of uric acid than those in the placebo group.

In further analyses of nonprimary and secondary endpoints, there were additional potentially troubling signals, although the 95% confidence intervals were wide: 0.9% of the patients treated with bempedoic acid died, compared with 0.3% of those in the placebo group; 0.4% and 0.1%, respectively, died from adjudicated cardiovascular disease; and 0.6% and 0.1%, respectively, were hospitalized for heart failure. Although the findings are potentially alarming, the imprecision that is reflected in the 95% confidence intervals renders the relative risk values virtually meaningless, but can these effect estimates be unseen?

The cumulative data from randomized treatment trials and from studies of human genetics say that, for a given reduction in the LDL cholesterol level, drugs that inhibit ATP citrate lyase and do not have off-target effects ought to yield reductions in the risk of cardiovascular disease that are similar to those achieved with statins. However, analysis of endpoints in treatment trials for which there is marginal statistical power is best avoided. Fortunately for bempedoic acid, an ongoing phase 3, cardiovascular outcome trial will provide additional information.

More broadly, the genetic characterization of drug targets is set to revolutionize how we develop medicines.

Michael V. Holmes, MD, is an epidemiologist at the University of Oxford, England. He made these comments in a published editorial (N Engl J Med. 2019 Mar 14;380[11]:1076-9). He had no disclosures.

Body

 

The primary endpoint of bempedoic acid’s safety, assessed by means of the incidence of adverse events and changes in safety laboratory variables during the CLEAR Harmony trial, did not differ meaningfully between the bempedoic acid group and the placebo group. However, patients in the bempedoic acid group had an excess risk of adverse events leading to discontinuation of the blinded trial regimen, an excess risk of gout, and higher blood concentrations of uric acid than those in the placebo group.

In further analyses of nonprimary and secondary endpoints, there were additional potentially troubling signals, although the 95% confidence intervals were wide: 0.9% of the patients treated with bempedoic acid died, compared with 0.3% of those in the placebo group; 0.4% and 0.1%, respectively, died from adjudicated cardiovascular disease; and 0.6% and 0.1%, respectively, were hospitalized for heart failure. Although the findings are potentially alarming, the imprecision that is reflected in the 95% confidence intervals renders the relative risk values virtually meaningless, but can these effect estimates be unseen?

The cumulative data from randomized treatment trials and from studies of human genetics say that, for a given reduction in the LDL cholesterol level, drugs that inhibit ATP citrate lyase and do not have off-target effects ought to yield reductions in the risk of cardiovascular disease that are similar to those achieved with statins. However, analysis of endpoints in treatment trials for which there is marginal statistical power is best avoided. Fortunately for bempedoic acid, an ongoing phase 3, cardiovascular outcome trial will provide additional information.

More broadly, the genetic characterization of drug targets is set to revolutionize how we develop medicines.

Michael V. Holmes, MD, is an epidemiologist at the University of Oxford, England. He made these comments in a published editorial (N Engl J Med. 2019 Mar 14;380[11]:1076-9). He had no disclosures.

Title
Safety signals raise concerns
Safety signals raise concerns

 

A novel, oral drug, bempedoic acid, safely cut LDL cholesterol levels by almost 20% in patients who had maxed out their statin treatment, in a pivotal trial with more than 2,000 patients. These findings were the centerpiece of a 4,000-patient-experience labeling application submitted to the Food and Drug Administration in late February 2019 for this first member of the ATP citrate lyase inhibitor class. Based on its performance, bempedoic acid seems on track for agency approval.

Aside from demonstrating safety, the efficacy goal of the CLEAR Harmony (Evaluation of Long-Term Safety and Tolerability of ETC-1002 in High-Risk Patients With Hyperlipidemia and High CV Risk) trial was to cut LDL cholesterol as an add-on to maximally tolerated statin treatment, as well as discretionary use of other lipid-lowering agents in patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.

That goal appeared to be met by the CLEAR Harmony results, as well as the results from four other studies that contributed data to the approval application filed for bempedoic acid. A clinical outcomes study is underway with more than 12,000 patients aimed at showing incremental clinical benefit from bempedoic acid on top of approved treatments for lowering LDL cholesterol, but those results are not expected until 2022. Until then, the application’s data focus on the evidence that the new drug safely lowers LDL cholesterol when used on top of existing treatments.

“Bempedoic acid provides an additional therapeutic option to safely lower LDL cholesterol in patients with high risk for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease already treated with a statin,” Kausik K. Ray, MD, said when he first reported these findings during the annual meeting of the European Society of Cardiology last August in Munich. The same results appeared in a newly released article (N Engl J Med. 2019 Mar 14;380[11]:1022-32).

Dr. Kausik K. Ray, professor of public health, University of Oxford, England
Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge News
Dr. Kausik K. Ray

Maximum recommended statin dosages exist because, for every doubling of the statin dosage, LDL cholesterol levels drop by about another 6%, but adverse events grow more common. Because bempedoic acid and other ATP citrate lyase inhibitors work via the same metabolic pathway as that of statins – HMG CoA reductase inhibitors – “we did not know whether squeezing another 20% of LDL cholesterol lowering would be tolerated. What we have clearly and reassuringly shown is it is well tolerated,” said Dr. Ray, a cardiologist and professor of public health at Imperial College, London.

The CLEAR Harmony results showed in 2,230 randomized patients that treatment with bempedoic acid cut LDL cholesterol levels by an average of 18% more compared with placebo in the intention-to-treat analysis, and by 20% in an on-treatment analysis.

By seeking U.S. marketing approval for bempedoic acid based on LDL-lowering and safety only, but without data on clinical endpoints, the company developing the drug is following a path already established by several other lipid-lowering drug classes.

Dr. Christie M. Ballantyne, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston
Dr. Christie M. Ballantyne

“Statins, ezetimibe and the PCSK9 inhibitors were all approved based on clinical trial results that showed LDL-cholesterol reductions with what the FDA judged to be acceptable safety, but without results from completed outcomes trials,” Christie M. Ballantyne, MD, a coauthor of the CLEAR Harmony study and professor and chief of cardiology at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, said in an interview.

 

 



Stephen Nicholls, MD, professor of cardiology at Monash University in Melbourne, added in an interview that “the precedent has been to conditionally approve LDL cholesterol–lowering drugs at this stage of development, based on the large body of evidence demonstrating that LDL cholesterol–lowering consistently produces clinical benefit.”

Dr. Stephen Nicholls, professor of cardiology, Monash University, Melbourne
Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge News
Dr. Stephen Nicholls


To gain more confidence that treatment with bempedoic acid exerts a benefit to patients prior to availability of clinical-outcome results, the developing company sponsored a genetic and epidemiologic study that looked at the association between naturally occurring mutations that dampen the activity of ATP citrate lyase, an enzyme that metabolically sits just upstream from HMG CoA reductase, the enzyme that statins target. Dr. Nicholls, Dr. Ray, and several other collaborators devised “genetic scores” that took into account variants of the gene that codes for ATP citrate lyase, and a separate score for HMG CoA reductase variants. Each score estimated a person’s activity for each of these enzymes. The researchers then used the scores to classify enzymatic activity in more than 650,000 people in several different databases, including more than 100,000 people with a history of major cardiovascular events.

The results showed that “genetic variants that mimic the effect of ATP citrate lyase inhibitors and statins appeared to lower plasma LDL cholesterol levels by the same mechanism of action. They were associated with nearly identical effects on the risk of cardiovascular disease and cancer per unit decrease in the LDL cholesterol level,” the investigators said in an article published concurrently with the CLEAR Harmony results (N Engl J Med. 2019 March 14;380[11]:1033-42).

Dr. Steven E. Nissen, Cleveland Clinic Foundation
Dr. Steven E. Nissen

This finding “strengthens the likelihood that an outcome trial will show benefits,” Steven E. Nissen, MD, chairman of cardiovascular medicine at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, and a lead investigator in the bempedoic acid outcomes trial, CLEAR Outcomes, said in an interview.

Dr. Nicholls noted that, on the basis of the genetic study’s results “it would seem very reasonable to extrapolate and expect that bempedoic acid should reduce cardiovascular events.”

The data reported by Dr. Ray and his associates from the CLEAR Harmony trial showed that overall, the adverse-event rates associated with bempedoic acid treatment were similar to the rates seen in patients who received placebo. But Michael V. Holmes, MD, who wrote an editorial that accompanied both reports, highlighted a few differences in the adverse event rates that concerned him. These were a statistically significant higher rate of gout and blood uric acid levels on bempedoic acid treatment compared with controls, a significantly higher rate of discontinuations because of adverse events, and nominally higher rates of death, cardiovascular death, and heart failure hospitalization, said Dr. Holmes, an epidemiologist at the University of Oxford, England.

But Dr. Nissen said that “the safety ‘signals’ involve very small numbers of patients and do not raise major concerns. The increases in gout and uric acid are worth noting, but are less weighty than the disease the drug is intended to treat: major cardiovascular events.”



Dr. Nichols added that “the large cardiovascular outcome trial will provide the opportunity to further study safety and potential side effects. I’m hesitant to overinterpret event data from a relatively small clinical trial that primarily focused on the lipid effects.”

Despite recent success of the PCSK9 inhibitors as an add-on or substitute for statin treatment of elevated LDL cholesterol, the cost of the drugs in this class has made the cardiovascular disease community eager for another alternative to statins.

“The PCSK9 inhibitors are extremely effective, but uptake has been slow due to their cost and formulary restrictions,” said Dr. Ballantyne. “Many high-risk patients continue to have persistently elevated levels of LDL cholesterol.” Bempedoic acid is “a new therapy that can help people who continue to have elevations of LDL cholesterol despite current therapies.”

CLEAR Harmony and the genetic study were sponsored by Esperion, the company developing bempedoic acid. Dr. Ray has been a consultant to several drug companies but had no other financial relationship to Esperion. Dr. Ballantyne and Dr. Nicholls have been consultants to and have received research funding from Esperion and from several other companies. Dr. Nissen is leading an Esperion-sponsored study but has no financial relationships with the company or with other companies.

SOURCEs: N Engl J Med. 2019 Mar 14;380[11]:1022-32 and 1033-42.

 

A novel, oral drug, bempedoic acid, safely cut LDL cholesterol levels by almost 20% in patients who had maxed out their statin treatment, in a pivotal trial with more than 2,000 patients. These findings were the centerpiece of a 4,000-patient-experience labeling application submitted to the Food and Drug Administration in late February 2019 for this first member of the ATP citrate lyase inhibitor class. Based on its performance, bempedoic acid seems on track for agency approval.

Aside from demonstrating safety, the efficacy goal of the CLEAR Harmony (Evaluation of Long-Term Safety and Tolerability of ETC-1002 in High-Risk Patients With Hyperlipidemia and High CV Risk) trial was to cut LDL cholesterol as an add-on to maximally tolerated statin treatment, as well as discretionary use of other lipid-lowering agents in patients with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease.

That goal appeared to be met by the CLEAR Harmony results, as well as the results from four other studies that contributed data to the approval application filed for bempedoic acid. A clinical outcomes study is underway with more than 12,000 patients aimed at showing incremental clinical benefit from bempedoic acid on top of approved treatments for lowering LDL cholesterol, but those results are not expected until 2022. Until then, the application’s data focus on the evidence that the new drug safely lowers LDL cholesterol when used on top of existing treatments.

“Bempedoic acid provides an additional therapeutic option to safely lower LDL cholesterol in patients with high risk for atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease already treated with a statin,” Kausik K. Ray, MD, said when he first reported these findings during the annual meeting of the European Society of Cardiology last August in Munich. The same results appeared in a newly released article (N Engl J Med. 2019 Mar 14;380[11]:1022-32).

Dr. Kausik K. Ray, professor of public health, University of Oxford, England
Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge News
Dr. Kausik K. Ray

Maximum recommended statin dosages exist because, for every doubling of the statin dosage, LDL cholesterol levels drop by about another 6%, but adverse events grow more common. Because bempedoic acid and other ATP citrate lyase inhibitors work via the same metabolic pathway as that of statins – HMG CoA reductase inhibitors – “we did not know whether squeezing another 20% of LDL cholesterol lowering would be tolerated. What we have clearly and reassuringly shown is it is well tolerated,” said Dr. Ray, a cardiologist and professor of public health at Imperial College, London.

The CLEAR Harmony results showed in 2,230 randomized patients that treatment with bempedoic acid cut LDL cholesterol levels by an average of 18% more compared with placebo in the intention-to-treat analysis, and by 20% in an on-treatment analysis.

By seeking U.S. marketing approval for bempedoic acid based on LDL-lowering and safety only, but without data on clinical endpoints, the company developing the drug is following a path already established by several other lipid-lowering drug classes.

Dr. Christie M. Ballantyne, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston
Dr. Christie M. Ballantyne

“Statins, ezetimibe and the PCSK9 inhibitors were all approved based on clinical trial results that showed LDL-cholesterol reductions with what the FDA judged to be acceptable safety, but without results from completed outcomes trials,” Christie M. Ballantyne, MD, a coauthor of the CLEAR Harmony study and professor and chief of cardiology at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, said in an interview.

 

 



Stephen Nicholls, MD, professor of cardiology at Monash University in Melbourne, added in an interview that “the precedent has been to conditionally approve LDL cholesterol–lowering drugs at this stage of development, based on the large body of evidence demonstrating that LDL cholesterol–lowering consistently produces clinical benefit.”

Dr. Stephen Nicholls, professor of cardiology, Monash University, Melbourne
Mitchel L. Zoler/MDedge News
Dr. Stephen Nicholls


To gain more confidence that treatment with bempedoic acid exerts a benefit to patients prior to availability of clinical-outcome results, the developing company sponsored a genetic and epidemiologic study that looked at the association between naturally occurring mutations that dampen the activity of ATP citrate lyase, an enzyme that metabolically sits just upstream from HMG CoA reductase, the enzyme that statins target. Dr. Nicholls, Dr. Ray, and several other collaborators devised “genetic scores” that took into account variants of the gene that codes for ATP citrate lyase, and a separate score for HMG CoA reductase variants. Each score estimated a person’s activity for each of these enzymes. The researchers then used the scores to classify enzymatic activity in more than 650,000 people in several different databases, including more than 100,000 people with a history of major cardiovascular events.

The results showed that “genetic variants that mimic the effect of ATP citrate lyase inhibitors and statins appeared to lower plasma LDL cholesterol levels by the same mechanism of action. They were associated with nearly identical effects on the risk of cardiovascular disease and cancer per unit decrease in the LDL cholesterol level,” the investigators said in an article published concurrently with the CLEAR Harmony results (N Engl J Med. 2019 March 14;380[11]:1033-42).

Dr. Steven E. Nissen, Cleveland Clinic Foundation
Dr. Steven E. Nissen

This finding “strengthens the likelihood that an outcome trial will show benefits,” Steven E. Nissen, MD, chairman of cardiovascular medicine at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation, and a lead investigator in the bempedoic acid outcomes trial, CLEAR Outcomes, said in an interview.

Dr. Nicholls noted that, on the basis of the genetic study’s results “it would seem very reasonable to extrapolate and expect that bempedoic acid should reduce cardiovascular events.”

The data reported by Dr. Ray and his associates from the CLEAR Harmony trial showed that overall, the adverse-event rates associated with bempedoic acid treatment were similar to the rates seen in patients who received placebo. But Michael V. Holmes, MD, who wrote an editorial that accompanied both reports, highlighted a few differences in the adverse event rates that concerned him. These were a statistically significant higher rate of gout and blood uric acid levels on bempedoic acid treatment compared with controls, a significantly higher rate of discontinuations because of adverse events, and nominally higher rates of death, cardiovascular death, and heart failure hospitalization, said Dr. Holmes, an epidemiologist at the University of Oxford, England.

But Dr. Nissen said that “the safety ‘signals’ involve very small numbers of patients and do not raise major concerns. The increases in gout and uric acid are worth noting, but are less weighty than the disease the drug is intended to treat: major cardiovascular events.”



Dr. Nichols added that “the large cardiovascular outcome trial will provide the opportunity to further study safety and potential side effects. I’m hesitant to overinterpret event data from a relatively small clinical trial that primarily focused on the lipid effects.”

Despite recent success of the PCSK9 inhibitors as an add-on or substitute for statin treatment of elevated LDL cholesterol, the cost of the drugs in this class has made the cardiovascular disease community eager for another alternative to statins.

“The PCSK9 inhibitors are extremely effective, but uptake has been slow due to their cost and formulary restrictions,” said Dr. Ballantyne. “Many high-risk patients continue to have persistently elevated levels of LDL cholesterol.” Bempedoic acid is “a new therapy that can help people who continue to have elevations of LDL cholesterol despite current therapies.”

CLEAR Harmony and the genetic study were sponsored by Esperion, the company developing bempedoic acid. Dr. Ray has been a consultant to several drug companies but had no other financial relationship to Esperion. Dr. Ballantyne and Dr. Nicholls have been consultants to and have received research funding from Esperion and from several other companies. Dr. Nissen is leading an Esperion-sponsored study but has no financial relationships with the company or with other companies.

SOURCEs: N Engl J Med. 2019 Mar 14;380[11]:1022-32 and 1033-42.

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Key clinical point: Bempedoic acid safely lowed LDL cholesterol levels in a pivotal trial.

Major finding: In the intention-to-treat analysis, bempedoic acid cut LDL cholesterol by 18%; by 20% in an on-treatment analysis.

Study details: CLEAR Harmony, a multicenter, randomized trial with 2,230 patients.

Disclosures: CLEAR Harmony and the genetic study were sponsored by Esperion, the company developing bempedoic acid. Dr. Ray has been a consultant to several drug companies but had no other financial relationship to Esperion. Dr. Ballantyne and Dr. Nicholls have been consultants to and have received research funding from Esperion and from several other companies. Dr. Nissen is leading an Esperion-sponsored study but has no financial relationships with the company or with other companies.

Sources: N Engl J Med. 2019 Mar 14;380[11]:1022-32 and 1033-42.

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