By Ron Winslow 

WASHINGTON--An experimental class of cholesterol-lowering drugs is emerging as the most promising new weapon against cardiovascular disease since the widely used medicines called statins first reached the market more than 25 years ago, medical studies show.

In a flurry of studies presented over the weekend at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology, the drugs, known as PCSK9 inhibitors, were shown to reduce LDL cholesterol levels by half to two-thirds across several different patient groups. Elevated LDL or bad cholesterol is a key risk factor for heart attack and stroke.

The new reports included five late-stage or phase 3 studies sponsored by Amgen Inc. (AMGN), another phase 3 trial from Sanofi SA (SNY) and its partner Regeneron Pharmaceuticals Inc. (REGN), and mid-stage or phase 2 data from Pfizer Inc. (PFE)

The companies are vying in a market that includes millions of patients who can't control their cholesterol with statins, which are among the most widely used and most lucrative drugs ever developed by the pharmaceutical industry.

The new results are consistent with findings from earlier, smaller studies of PCSK9 inhibitors, but suggest the drugs have a durable effect on LDL cholesterol. No significant safety issues turned up in patients followed for as long as year.

"There's not a shred of doubt that this is a very efficacious way to lower LDL" cholesterol, said Steven Nissen, chairman of cardiovascular medicine at the Cleveland Clinic, who wasn't involved in any of the reported studies.

But he and other heart experts said important questions remain. Chief among them is whether the dramatic reductions in LDL will translate into meaningful reductions in heart attacks, strokes and other serious consequences of cardiovascular disease.

"The preliminary data are very persuasive," said Sidney Smith, a cardiologist at University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. "But we have to see the clinical outcomes."

All three companies have launched major studies to answer the question but results generally aren't expected until 2018. Meantime, companies expect that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration will consider whether to approve the drugs based on LDL lowering and other factors before the data on heart attacks and other outcomes are in.

Statin therapy, exemplified by Pfizer's blockbuster Lipitor, has been a mainstay strategy after diet and exercise for reducing heart risk. Lipitor and most other statins have lost patent protection and are now available in the U.S. for pennies a pill.

Under recently revised cholesterol guidelines, more than 50 million Americans are candidates for statin therapy, according to a recent analysis by Duke University researchers in the New England Journal of Medicine.

But estimates are that about 10% of people, or more than five million, suffer muscle pain or other side effects that prevent them from taking statins, or taking them at doses required to achieve cholesterol-lowering goals.

Others can't reach their targets on aggressive regimens, including people with genetically high levels of LDL. Merck & Co.'s (MRK) ezetimibe modestly lowers LDL, but whether the way it acts on cholesterol also reduces heart risk hasn't been proven.

The anti-PSCK9 agents include Amgen's evolocumab, alirocumab from Sanofi and Regeneron and Pfizer's bococizumab. They are bioengineered antibodies that block PCSK9, a protein that interferes with LDL clearance--a different mechanism from how statins work.

They are injected, much like insulin shots, and the companies are studying biweekly and monthly regimens.

One of the new studies of Amgen's drug called Descartes illustrates the effect of the agents. In the 901-patient study, those treated with a 420 milligram dose once a month had a 57% reduction in LDL compared with those who took a placebo.

The results were similar whether the drug was added to a strategy of diet alone or three different intensities of statin therapy, including one where ezetimibe was added to the highest dose of generic Lipitor. Adverse events included upper respiratory infection, flu and back pain. The study was also published online by the New England Journal of Medicine.

Other Amgen studies showed significant LDL lowering in patients with genetically high LDL and among those considered statin-intolerant. The Sanofi-Regeneron trial, the first of about 10 phase 3 studies the companies expect to report out this year, showed its drug was superior to ezetimibe in lowering LDL over six months.

   Write to Ron Winslow at Ron.Winslow@wsj.com 

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