Bempedoic acid for the treatment of dyslipidemia.

Department of Clinical Pharmacy, University of Colorado Skaggs School of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, Aurora, CO, USA.

Drugs in context. 2020
Full text from:

Other resources

Abstract

Cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of death worldwide and one key factor associated with the increased CVD risk is dyslipidemia. Statin therapy remains the first-line treatment to manage dyslipidemia, yet many patients do not achieve optimal low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (LDL-C) levels even after taking moderate- or high-intensity statins; therefore, additional, non-statin therapy is often needed. Bempedoic acid is a prodrug that, once activated, decreases LDL-C levels by the inhibition of adenosine triphosphate citrate lyase in the liver. Five clinical trials have demonstrated the safety and efficacy of bempedoic acid and the bempedoic acid/ezetimibe combination in lowering LDL-C in patients with atherosclerotic CVD and heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia and also in high-risk primary prevention, and statin-intolerant patients. Bempedoic acid has been demonstrated to lower LDL-C levels by 15-25% in clinical trials and up to 38% when combined with ezetimibe. In 2020, the FDA approved bempedoic acid. Furthermore, the combination of bempedoic acid with ezetimibe is FDA approved for the treatment of adults with heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia or established atherosclerotic CVD who require additional LDL-C lowering after maximally tolerated statin therapy. The ongoing CLEAR OUTCOMES trial aims to evaluate whether bempedoic acid can reduce cardiovascular events in patients with statin intolerance and results will be available in the next 3 years. This outcomes trial will be pivotal for determining the role of bempedoic acid in the non-statin lipid-lowering armamentarium.

Methodological quality

Publication Type : Review

Metadata