New type of drug could be cholesterol breakthrough

New cholesterol drug could be biggest advance since statins

New research boosts hope that a highly anticipated, experimental class of cholesterol drugs can greatly lower the risk for heart attacks, death and other heart-related problems. The government will decide this summer whether to allow two of these drugs on the market.

Studies show people given one of these new, injectable drugs in addition to statins such as Lipitor or Zocor saw significant heart health benefits.

"It lowered bad cholesterol by a whopping 60 percent, which is really unheard of," Dr. Daniel Yadegar, a cardiologist at New York-Presbyterian Hospital, told CBS News.

Not only did the drugs cut LDL or bad cholesterol, they also lowered the risk of suffering a heart problem or dying of cardiac arrest by about 50 percent, researchers found.

Many people cannot tolerate statins or get enough help from them, so new medicines are badly needed.

"Cardiologists are very excited and encouraged by this new study," CBS News medical contributor Dr. Tara Narula, a cardiologist at Lenox Hill hospital in New York, told "CBS This Morning."

The studies were published online Sunday by the New England Journal of Medicine and discussed at an American College of Cardiology conference in San Diego.

Experimental drug shows promise in lowering cholesterol

They are fresh analyses from older studies designed to look at how much the drugs lower cholesterol, so they can only suggest that the drugs also lower heart problems, not prove that point. Definitive studies will take about two more years. The U.S. Food and Drug Administration is expected to decide whether to approve the drugs this summer based on results of the studies done so far.

The drugs are evolocumab, which Amgen Inc. wants to market as Repatha, and alirocumab, which Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. and Sanofi SA have named Praluent.

They lower LDL or bad cholesterol more powerfully and in a different way than existing drugs, by blocking PCSK9, a substance that interferes with the liver's ability to remove cholesterol from the blood.

The drugs are taken as an injection either once a month at higher dose or twice a month at lower dose. Cost could be an issue, with the drugs running "anywhere from $7,000 to $10,000 per patient per year, as opposed statins, which can cost about $40 a month," Narula said.

Side effects also remain a question. There are concerns about how the drugs may impact thinking, confusion and memory -- problems the FDA has asked the companies to track.

Those issues problems affected only 1 or 2 percent of patients and may be temporary, but they were twice as common among people taking one of the new drugs and need to be closely monitored as studies continue, said Dr. Anthony DeMaria, a University of California at San Diego heart specialist and past president of the American College of Cardiology. As a patient facing potential side effects, "the last one I want" is one that affects the brain, he said.

Dr. Eric Topol, a cardiologist at Scripps Clinic in La Jolla, California, said the new results show "an unquestionable signal" of a potential safety issue. More side effects typically turn up once a drug is approved and used in a wider population, he said.

Two other heart experts -- Drs. Neil Stone and Daniel Lloyd-Jones of Northwestern University in Chicago -- wrote in the medical journal that "it would be premature to endorse these drugs for widespread use" until the definitive studies are done in a couple of years. Other drugs that initially seemed good failed when put to the most rigorous test, they wrote.

Still, the results so far suggest that the drugs "appear to be on track" to be important new medicines, they wrote.

Dr. Clyde Yancy, cardiology chief at Northwestern University in Chicago and a former American Heart Association president, agreed.

"Science has revealed a brand new approach to treating cholesterol," and there is "reasonable enthusiasm" it will be a big boon to patients, he said.

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