THOUSAND OAKS (dpa-AFX) - Amgen (AMGN) announced new detailed data from the Phase 3 YUKAWA-2 study evaluating Repatha (evolocumab), a novel investigational cholesterol-lowering medication, in Japanese patients with high cardiovascular risk and high cholesterol.
Data from the study showed subcutaneous Repatha 140 mg every two weeks or 420 mg monthly, compared to placebo, in combination with different daily doses of atorvastatin, reduced low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) by 67 to 76 percent from baseline at week 12 and at the mean of weeks 10 and 12.
In the YUKAWA-2 study, the most common adverse events that occurred in greater than 2 percent of the Repatha group were nasopharyngitis (16.8 percent Repatha; 17.8 percent placebo), gastroenteritis (3.0 percent Repatha; 1.0 percent placebo) and pharyngitis (2.5 percent Repatha; 2.5 percent placebo).
Repatha is an investigational fully human monoclonal antibody that inhibits proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9), a protein that reduces the liver's ability to remove LDL-C, or 'bad' cholesterol, from the blood.
High cholesterol is the most common form of dyslipidemia, which is an abnormality of cholesterol and/or fats in the blood. There are approximately 300 million cases of dyslipidemia in the U.S., Japan and Western Europe.
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