Washington, Nov 15 (ANI): An injection may someday be able to lower "bad" cholesterol levels in patients who are unable to control their cholesterol with current medications, according to a new research.
In its first preliminary human tests, the medicine in the new shot lowered low-density lipoprotein, or "bad" cholesterol, in healthy volunteers who received the highest dose an average 64 percent more than those who received an inactive placebo injection.
The injected material - targeting a recently identified cholesterol regulator - is a monoclonal antibody that's a laboratory-made human protein.
Monoclonal antibodies are already used to treat certain cancers and other medical conditions.
In the study, scientists created the monoclonal antibody AMG145 to disable the cholesterol regulator PCSK9, which interferes with the liver's ability to remove bad cholesterol from the blood. Therefore, turning it off improves cholesterol levels.
"PCSK9 is the first target in lipid metabolism to be inhibited using a monoclonal antibody, and it appears to be a promising way to lower bad cholesterol," said Clapton Dias, Ph.D., lead researcher and medical sciences director of clinical pharmacology and early development at Amgen, Inc., in Thousand Oaks, Ca.
The study involved 54 men and two women, 18 to 45 years old, who were healthy and not taking other medications.
Participants received a single injection that contained one of five doses of AMG145 or a placebo. Sixteen received the injections intravenously and the others got simple injections that delivered the drug just underneath the skin.
After the injections, bad cholesterol was measured frequently for 85-113 days, along with other laboratory measures related to heart disease.
"The more PCSK9 was lowered, the more bad cholesterol levels went down. With higher doses, bad cholesterol stayed lower for a longer period," Dias said.
If AMG145 proves safe and effective in further clinical trials, it could help people unable to control their cholesterol with current medications that work in different ways.
The study was presented at the American Heart Association's Scientific Sessions 2011. (ANI)
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