Merck’s Oral PCSK9 Inhibitor Shows Promise for Ultra‑Low Cholesterol Levels

Merck’s Oral PCSK9 Inhibitor Shows Promise for Ultra‑Low Cholesterol Levels
Yayınlama: 08.11.2025
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Merck & Co. announced encouraging results from its late‑stage trial of an experimental pill that blocks the PCSK9 protein, a breakthrough that could usher in an era of dramatically lower cholesterol levels for millions of patients. Unlike existing PCSK9‑targeting drugs, which must be injected and carry hefty price tags, Merck’s once‑daily tablet appears to cut LDL (“bad”) cholesterol by up to 70 % while offering a cost profile that could make it accessible to a far broader segment of the population.The Phase 3 study enrolled more than 5,000 adults with high LDL cholesterol who were already on statins but still faced elevated cardiovascular risk. Over a 24‑week period, participants receiving the oral PCSK9 inhibitor achieved an average LDL reduction of 68 % compared with a modest 12 % drop in the placebo group. Moreover, the drug’s safety record was reassuring: adverse events were comparable to those seen with placebo, and no significant liver or muscle toxicity emerged.“These data suggest we are on the cusp of a paradigm shift,” said Dr. Karen Liu, Merck’s senior vice president of cardiovascular research. “An effective, pill‑based PCSK9 therapy could dramatically expand the number of patients who can achieve guideline‑recommended LDL targets without the logistical and financial burdens of injections.”Current PCSK9 inhibitors such as alirocumab and evolocumab have proven efficacy but are limited by biweekly or monthly subcutaneous dosing and annual costs that can exceed $14,000 per patient. By contrast, Merck projects the oral agent could be priced at a fraction of that amount, potentially aligning its cost with that of generic statins. If approved, the drug could become the first widely affordable, non‑injectable option for individuals whose cholesterol remains stubbornly high despite statin therapy.Cardiologists welcomed the news but cautioned that longer‑term outcomes still need to be demonstrated. “While LDL lowering is a strong surrogate for reduced heart attacks and strokes, we’ll need to see hard‑endpoint data from larger, longer studies before fully embracing this as a standard of care,” noted Dr. Miguel Alvarez, a preventive cardiology specialist at the University of Chicago.Merck plans to submit a New Drug Application to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration later this year, with parallel filings anticipated in Europe and Asia. If the agency grants approval, the pill could reach the market as early as 2027, pending final regulatory review and post‑marketing commitments.The potential impact extends beyond individual patients. Health economists estimate that a cost‑effective oral PCSK9 inhibitor could save the U.S. healthcare system billions of dollars by averting cardiovascular events that currently drive high expenditures. For patients, the convenience of a daily tablet could improve adherence, a persistent challenge with injectable regimens.As the fight against heart disease continues, Merck’s oral PCSK9 blocker may represent a pivotal step toward making ultra‑low cholesterol levels a realistic goal for a much larger portion of the global population.
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