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Wednesday 19 February 2014

Cholesterol-Lowering Drug Market Heats Up

Patients with high cholesterol are close to having a new class of drugs to help lower their cholesterol levels. So called PCSK9 inhibitors work in a completely different way than statins, the most popular class of cholesterol-lowering drugs, allowing them to be used in conjunction with the current standard of care in patients that haven't gotten to their cholesterol goal.
Amgen is in the lead with evolocumab, but Regeneron Pharmaceuticals andSanofi , which are jointly developing alirocumab, aren't too far behind. Beyond those two, quite a few drugmakers -- RochePfizerNovartis, and others -- are taking their own shot at developing PCSK9 inhibitors.
In the video that follows, Max Macaluso, the Fool's health-care bureau chief, and Fool contributor Brian Orelli discuss why the class of PCSK9 inhibitors is worth keeping an eye on and potential pitfalls the companies may face.
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More money in the pockets of big pharma and their shareholders.

Graham

2 comments:

Lowcarb team member said...

I only some of those profits could be used for a truly independent and comprehensive study of outcomes versus cholesterol (levels and structure).

John

Anonymous said...

Yes you are right more money for big pharma and the circus continues but who are the clowns?

Yes, it's us the general public, or those in the general public that enjoy having egg thrown in our faces.

Martin