Cardiology Pharmaceuticals

Two Sides to Bempedoic Acid’s Primary Prevention Impact

A Cleveland Clinic-led study stunned the ADA 2023 crowd this week, showing that bempedoic acid (Esperion’s Nexletol) significantly reduced future cardiovascular events among people with high CVD risks who had never experienced a major cardiac event. 

The JAMA-published subanalysis of the 14k-patient CLEAR Outcomes trial looked at a subgroup 4,206 primary prevention patients (high CVD risks, diabetes, no previous CV events, statin-intolerant, 59% women) who were randomized to either take bempedoic acid (180 mg daily oral) or a placebo.

The bempedoic acid group achieved a 21.3% average LDL-C reduction versus placebo at six months (-30.2 mg/dL, 142.5 mg/dL at baseline), and had 21.5% lower HSCRP levels at 12 months (2.4 mg/L at baseline). 

Those “modest” cholesterol reductions appeared to drive significant outcome improvements over 40 months:

  • 30% reduced risk of MACE 4 (5.3% vs 7.6% – CV death, MI, stroke, or coronary revascularization) — the primary endpoint
  • 36% reduced risk of MACE 3 (4.0% vs. 6.4% – CV death, MI, or stroke)
  • 39% reduced risk of nonfatal myocardial infarction (1.4% vs. 2.2%)
  • 39% reduced risk of cardiovascular death (1.8% vs. 3.1%)
  • 27% reduced risk of all-cause mortality (3.6% vs. 5.2%)

These subanalysis results far surpassed those from the overall CLEAR Outcomes trial, which showed a much smaller 13% reduction in MACE 4 among both primary and secondary prevention patients, and didn’t reduce all-cause mortality.

The authors called the study a “wake-up call” for physicians, noting that less than half of U.S. adults who are candidates for primary prevention lipid-lowering therapy actually receive it, including many patients who can’t or don’t want to take statins.

However, the corresponding JAMA editorial and critics on CardioTwitter suggest that these results might be “too good to be true” (e.g. statistical issues, implausible differences from CLEAR trial results), and the editorial emphasized that bempedoic acid should be viewed as a “good plan B” rather than a statin substitute. 

The Takeaway

At least within this particular subanalysis group, bempedoic acid massively reduced high-risk patients’ risk of experiencing their first CV event, while underscoring the overall importance of primary LDL-C reduction (regardless of medication). 

However, commentary from study authors and the cardiology community suggests that it might take even stronger evidence and some big changes (new guidelines, lower costs, more education/outreach) in order to meaningfully expand adoption of preventative LDL-C reduction therapies — especially beyond statins.

Get twice-weekly insights on the biggest stories shaping cardiology.

You might also like

Electrophysiology August 21, 2025

Conduction-System Pacing Succeeds at Treating AV Block August 21, 2025

Conduction-system pacing could be poised to reshape standard care for atrioventricular (AV) block patients after the randomized CSPACE trial demonstrated its significant benefits over traditional right ventricular septal pacing. Taking a closer look at CSP’s potential, the CSPACE trial enrolled 202 patients with AV block at two Australian hospitals, randomizing them to conduction-system pacing or […]

Cardiology Pharmaceuticals August 18, 2025

Rivaroxaban Monotherapy Could Be Better for CAD + AFib August 18, 2025

New analysis from the AFIRE trial suggests rivaroxaban monotherapy might be emerging as a preferred antithrombotic strategy for patients with AFib and stable coronary artery disease, especially in older age groups. The Post Hoc AFIRE Analysis examined 2,215 Japanese patients with AFib and stable CAD, stratifying them into four age groups (<70, 70-74, 75-79, and […]

Surgeries & Interventions August 14, 2025

TEER Could Save Lives in AFMR Patients August 14, 2025

Shedding light on a new treatment for an understudied condition, data published in EHJ suggests that transcatheter edge-to-edge repair (TEER) delivers significant survival advantages in patients with atrial functional mitral regurgitation (FMR). The new OCEAN-Mitral/REVEAL-AFMR Analysis compared 441 TEER-treated patients against 640 medically managed controls with moderate or severe atrial FMR, stating a solid case […]

You might also like..

Select All

You're signed up!

It's great to have you as a reader. Check your inbox for a welcome email.

-- The Cardiac Wire Team

You're all set!