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Bempedoic Acid Versus Statins in Primary-Prevention Patients With Suboptimal Statin Adherence: Effects on LDL-C Reduction and Tolerability

Bempedoic Acid Versus Statins in Primary-Prevention Patients With Suboptimal Statin Adherence: Effects on LDL-C Reduction and Tolerability

Status
Not yet recruiting
Phases
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT07239414
Acronym
BASIS
Enrollment
690
Registered
2025-11-20
Start date
2025-11-10
Completion date
2027-02-21
Last updated
2025-11-20

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Cardiovascular

Keywords

bempodoic acid

Brief summary

Bempedoic acid is an oral, non-statin LDL-cholesterol (LDL-C) lowering agent that inhibits ATP citrate lyase (ACL), upstream of HMG-CoA reductase (the enzyme inhibited by statins). MDPI +1 In patients with hypercholesterolemia who are unable to tolerate statins, or have sub-optimal statin adherence/tolerance, bempedoic acid has been shown to reduce LDL-C by \ 20-30% (monotherapy) and more when added to other therapies (e.g., ezetimibe) (≈30-40%). PubMed * 2 medicinejournal.in * 2 In the large primary-prevention subgroup of the trial CLEAR Outcomes (statin-intolerant patients without prior cardiovascular event), bempedoic acid (180 mg daily) lowered LDL-C by \ 21.3% and hs-CRP by \ 21.5%. It also was associated with a significant reduction in major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE): hazard ratio 0.70 (95% CI 0.55-0.89) versus placebo over \ 40 months. PubMed +1 Regarding tolerability: muscle-related adverse events appear lower compared to statins (because bempedoic acid is activated only in the liver, not in skeletal muscle) and it appears generally well tolerated, but there are signals of increased uric acid/gout, elevated hepatic enzymes, and creatinine/renal effects. MDPI +1 Comparative cardiovascular benefit (when normalized per unit LDL-C reduction) suggests that bempedoic acid may yield similar relative risk reductions as statins, though absolute LDL-C lowering is less.

Detailed description

Mechanism: Bempedoic acid works by inhibiting ACL in the cholesterol-synthesis pathway; since the activating enzyme is present only in the liver (not muscle), the risk of muscle-related side-effects is diminished. Frontiers Indication/Use Case: Particularly useful in patients who (a) are at elevated cardiovascular risk (primary prevention or secondary), (b) cannot tolerate statins or have suboptimal adherence, and (c) need further LDL-C reduction beyond statin (or in place of statin) therapy. Efficacy: \ 20-30% LDL-C lowering as monotherapy in statin-intolerant patients. PubMed +1 Additional benefit when combined with other therapies (e.g., \ 30-40% reduction when combined with ezetimibe). medicinejournal.in In primary-prevention high-risk patients intolerant of statins: LDL-C reduction \ 21% and hs-CRP \ 21% with meaningful reduction in cardiovascular events. PubMed +1 Tolerability/Safety: Lower risk of muscle symptoms compared to statins. PubMed +1 Known adverse signals: hyperuricemia/gout, elevated liver enzymes, possibly increased creatinine/renal changes. JAMA Network +1 Comparison with Statins: Statins typically reduce LDL-C by much larger margins (30-50%+ depending on dose/intensity). Bempedoic acid's LDL-C reduction is more modest in comparison. However, when looking at the risk reduction per unit LDL-C lowering, bempedoic acid appears to yield similar relative benefits as statins. American College of Cardiology +1 Clinical Implication: In patients with suboptimal statin use (due to intolerance, non-adherence, or contraindication), bempedoic acid offers a viable adjunct or alternative lipid-lowering strategy in the primary prevention setting. Limitations: Not a direct head-to-head trial of bempedoic acid versus statins in the scenario of suboptimal statin adherence. Absolute reduction in LDL-C is lower than high-intensity statins, so expectations must be calibrated accordingly. Long-term safety in wider populations continues to be monitored. Cost and accessibility may vary by region; local cost-effectiveness needs evaluation.

Interventions

rosuvastatin 5mg HS

DRUGPlacebo

Placebo given OD

Sponsors

Sohaib Ashraf
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
QUADRUPLE (Subject, Caregiver, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
40 Years to No maximum
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Adults aged ≥40 years with no established ASCVD (no prior myocardial infarction, stroke, or acute coronary syndrome). * Indicated for lipid-lowering therapy (LDL-C ≥130 mg/dL or 10-year ASCVD risk ≥7.5%). * Documented history of poor statin adherence, defined as: * Self-reported adherence \<80% in the past 3 months, or * Prior statin discontinuation for adverse effects documented in the medical record. * Willingness to provide written informed consent.

Exclusion criteria

* Established ASCVD (secondary prevention). * Severe hepatic impairment (ALT or AST \>3× upper limit of normal). * Severe renal impairment (eGFR \<30 mL/min/1.73 m²). * Pregnancy, breastfeeding, or women of childbearing potential not using contraception. * Current or planned treatment with PCSK9 inhibitors, fibrates, or niacin. * Known hypersensitivity to study drugs or excipients.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Percentage change in LDL-C6 monthsPercentage change in LDL-C from baseline LDL-C
Composite adherence/tolerability endpoint:6 monthstreatment discontinuation, muscle-related symptoms, or laboratory abnormalities (ALT/AST \>3× ULN, uric acid \>9 mg/dL).

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Absolute change in LDL-C6 monthsAbsolute change in LDL-C from baseline to 6 months.
Proportion achieving LDL-C <100 mg/dL (or <70 mg/dL for diabetics).6 monthsProportion achieving LDL-C \<100 mg/dL (or \<70 mg/dL for diabetics).
Change in hs-CRP6 monthsChange in hs-CRP from baseline.

Contacts

Primary ContactSohaib Ashraf Consultant Cardiologist, MD Cardiology
sohaib-ashraf@outlook.com+923334474523

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026