Drug Monograph

Nexletol (Bempedoic Acid)

bempedoic acid

ATP-Citrate Lyase (ACL) Inhibitor · Oral Tablet · Esperion Therapeutics
Pharmacokinetic Profile
Half-Life
21 ± 11 hours
Metabolism
Acyl glucuronide (UGT2B7); not CYP450
Protein Binding
99.3%
Bioavailability
Oral; food does not affect absorption
Volume of Distribution
18 L (V/F)
Clinical Information
Drug Class
ACL Inhibitor
Available Doses
180 mg tablet
Route
Oral
Renal Adjustment
None required (mild through renal failure)
Hepatic Adjustment
None (mild-moderate); not studied in severe
Pregnancy
Discontinue when recognized
Lactation
Breastfeeding not recommended
Schedule
Not a controlled substance
Generic Available
No
Rx

Indications

IndicationApproved PopulationTherapy TypeStatus
CV risk reduction — established CVDAdults unable to take recommended statin therapyAlone or add-on to other LLTFDA Approved
CV risk reduction — high risk without established CVDAdults unable to take recommended statin therapy, at high risk for CVD eventAlone or add-on to other LLTFDA Approved
Primary hyperlipidemia (including HeFH) — LDL-C loweringAdultsAdjunct to diet; alone or combined with other LDL-C lowering therapies including statinsFDA Approved

Bempedoic acid is a first-in-class oral ACL inhibitor initially approved in February 2020 for LDL-C lowering in patients with HeFH or established ASCVD on maximally tolerated statins. In March 2024, the FDA approved a major label expansion based on the CLEAR Outcomes trial, adding CV risk reduction indications for both primary and secondary prevention patients unable to take recommended statin therapy, and removing the statin co-administration requirement. Bempedoic acid is the only oral non-statin LDL-C-lowering drug with an FDA indication for both primary prevention of CV events and LDL-C reduction.

Off-Label Considerations

Statin-associated muscle symptoms (SAMS) without complete intolerance: While the CLEAR Outcomes trial enrolled patients who were statin-intolerant or unable to take recommended doses, bempedoic acid is increasingly used in patients with partial statin intolerance who can tolerate low-dose statins combined with bempedoic acid. Evidence quality: Moderate (subgroup analyses of CLEAR Outcomes).

Combination with PCSK9 inhibitors: PCSK9 inhibitor users were excluded from the primary hyperlipidemia trials. Combination use has limited data but is mechanistically rational. Evidence quality: Low.

Dose

Dosing

Adult Dosing by Clinical Scenario

Clinical ScenarioStarting DoseMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
ASCVD with LDL-C above goal — statin-intolerant180 mg PO daily180 mg PO daily180 mg/dayCan be taken with or without food. Single fixed dose; no titration. CLEAR Outcomes showed 13% MACE-4 reduction (HR 0.87).
Assess lipids within 8–12 weeks of initiation
High CV risk, primary prevention — unable to take recommended statin doses180 mg PO daily180 mg PO daily180 mg/dayMarch 2024 label expansion. Only non-statin oral LDL-C-lowering agent indicated for primary prevention. May be used alone or with low-dose statin.
HeFH or primary hyperlipidemia — adjunct to maximally tolerated statin180 mg PO daily180 mg PO daily180 mg/dayExpected LDL-C reduction 17–18% vs placebo at Week 12 when added to background statin (Trials 2 & 3).
Avoid simvastatin >20 mg and pravastatin >40 mg when co-prescribed
Monotherapy for primary hyperlipidemia — statin not possible180 mg PO daily180 mg PO daily180 mg/day2024 label supports use alone when concomitant LDL-C lowering therapy is not possible. Consider adding ezetimibe for greater LDL-C reduction (Nexlizet combination available).

Special Populations

PopulationDose AdjustmentMaintenance DoseMaximum DoseNotes
Renal impairment (mild through renal failure)None required180 mg/day180 mg/dayNo clinically significant PK differences across renal function categories (FDA PI). Monitor uric acid and creatinine as bempedoic acid inhibits renal OAT2.
Hepatic impairment (mild to moderate; Child-Pugh A or B)None required180 mg/day180 mg/dayNot studied in severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh C). Use with caution given hepatic activation of the prodrug.
Elderly (≥65 years)None required180 mg/day180 mg/day58–59% of participants in clinical trials were ≥65 years. No differences in safety or efficacy observed (FDA PI). Monitor for tendon rupture risk, which increases with age.
Clinical Pearl: Prodrug Advantage for Muscle Tolerability

Bempedoic acid is a prodrug activated in the liver by ACSVL1 (very long-chain acyl-CoA synthetase 1), an enzyme not expressed in skeletal muscle. This liver-selective activation is the mechanistic basis for the low incidence of myalgia and muscle-related adverse events relative to statins, making it particularly suitable for statin-intolerant patients. In the CLEAR Outcomes trial, muscle-related complaints were not significantly different between bempedoic acid and placebo.

PK

Pharmacology

Mechanism of Action

Bempedoic acid inhibits adenosine triphosphate-citrate lyase (ACL), an enzyme that operates upstream of HMG-CoA reductase in the hepatic cholesterol biosynthesis pathway. It is a prodrug requiring activation via coenzyme A conjugation by ACSVL1 to form ETC-1002-CoA, the active inhibitory species. Since ACSVL1 is expressed predominantly in the liver and is absent from skeletal muscle, bempedoic acid achieves liver-selective cholesterol synthesis inhibition without the muscle toxicity associated with HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors. Inhibition of ACL reduces intrahepatic cholesterol pools, triggering compensatory upregulation of LDL receptor expression on hepatocyte surfaces and thereby increasing clearance of circulating LDL-C. Bempedoic acid also has a reversible active metabolite (ESP15228) that contributes modestly to the overall pharmacological effect. In the CLEAR Outcomes trial, bempedoic acid reduced LDL-C by 20% more than placebo at 6 months (95% CI: 19–21%; FDA PI) and reduced high-sensitivity C-reactive protein by 22%, suggesting additional anti-inflammatory properties (NEJM 2023).

ADME Profile

ParameterValueClinical Implication
AbsorptionOral; median Tmax 3.5 h; food has no effect on bioavailability; Cmax 20.6 ± 6.1 µg/mL at steady stateConvenient once-daily dosing with or without meals. Maximum LDL-C-lowering effect occurs by Week 4.
DistributionV/F 18 L; protein binding 99.3%; does not partition into blood cellsSmall volume of distribution indicates primarily intravascular and hepatic distribution. High protein binding may be relevant for drug displacement interactions, though none have been identified clinically.
MetabolismPrimary: acyl glucuronide conjugation (UGT2B7). Also converted to active metabolite ESP15228 (AUC ratio ~18%). Not a CYP450 substrate, inhibitor, or inducer. Weakly inhibits OATP1B1, OATP1B3, and OAT2.CYP450-independent metabolism avoids most traditional DDIs. OAT2 inhibition explains elevations in serum uric acid and creatinine. OATP1B1/1B3 inhibition accounts for increased statin levels (simvastatin, pravastatin).
Eliminationt½ 21 ± 11 h; CL/F 11.2 mL/min; ~70% urine (mainly as glucuronide), ~30% feces; <2% unchanged in urine; <5% unchanged in feces + urine combinedOnce-daily dosing appropriate given the ~21-hour half-life. Steady state achieved by Day 7 with ~2.3-fold accumulation. Minimal renal excretion of parent drug supports use across renal function categories.
SE

Side Effects

≥10% Very Common (CLEAR Outcomes CV Trial; N=7,001; median 3.1 years)
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Hyperuricemia16% (vs 8% placebo)Due to OAT2 inhibition in renal tubules. Onset within first 4 weeks; persists during treatment; reversible on discontinuation. Mean placebo-adjusted uric acid increase ~0.8 mg/dL. Higher risk in patients with prior gout history.
Renal impairment (lab-based)11% (vs 9% placebo)Includes eGFR decrease, creatinine increase, and hematuria. Mean creatinine increase 0.05 mg/dL at Week 12 (hyperlipidemia trials); in CLEAR, creatinine increased ≥0.5 mg/dL in 7.1% vs 5.5% placebo. Mechanistic (OAT2-mediated), not structural nephrotoxicity. Generally reversible on discontinuation.
1–10% Common — Primary Hyperlipidemia Trials (FDA PI Table 1; N=2,009)
Adverse EffectIncidenceClinical Note
Upper respiratory tract infection4.5% (vs 4.0% placebo)Marginal excess; unlikely to be causally related
Muscle spasms3.6% (vs 2.3% placebo)Distinct from statin-induced myalgia; not associated with CK elevation. May reflect electrolyte shifts or local effects.
Hyperuricemia3.5% (vs 1.1% placebo)Lower rate in the shorter hyperlipidemia trials than in the longer CLEAR Outcomes trial (16%). 26% of patients with normal baseline uric acid experienced at least one hyperuricemia event.
Back pain3.3% (vs 2.2% placebo)Small excess over placebo; monitor for tendon-related symptoms
Abdominal pain or discomfort3.1% (vs 2.2% placebo)Includes upper and lower abdominal pain. Generally mild and self-limiting.
Bronchitis3.0% (vs 2.5% placebo)Minimal difference from placebo
Pain in extremity3.0% (vs 1.7% placebo)Not associated with CK elevations; assess for tendon pathology if persistent
Anemia2.8% (vs 1.9% placebo)5.1% had hemoglobin decrease ≥2 g/dL below LLN (vs 2.3%); generally asymptomatic. Long-term CLEAR data: 4.7% vs 3.9%.
Elevated liver enzymes2.1% (vs 0.8% placebo)AST >3× ULN in 1.4% vs 0.4%; mostly transient and resolved with continued therapy. No cases of drug-induced liver injury with Hy’s law criteria met.
Serious Serious Adverse Events (Regardless of Frequency)
Adverse EffectEstimated FrequencyTypical OnsetRequired Action
Tendon rupture0.5% (vs 0% placebo in hyperlipidemia trials; 1.2% vs 0.9% in CLEAR)Weeks to months after initiationDiscontinue immediately. Sites include rotator cuff, biceps tendon, and Achilles tendon. Higher risk in patients >60 years, on corticosteroids or fluoroquinolones, renal failure, or prior tendon disorders.
Gout1.5% (vs 0.4% placebo in hyperlipidemia trials; 3.2% vs 2.2% in CLEAR)Within weeks; elevated risk in patients with prior gout history (11.2% vs 1.7% placebo)Initiate urate-lowering therapy as appropriate. Consider risk-benefit in patients with gout history before prescribing. In patients without prior gout: 1.0% vs 0.3% placebo.
Hepatotoxicity (AST >3× ULN)1.4% (vs 0.4% placebo)Variable; usually within first monthsMonitor LFTs. Most elevations transient and resolve with continued therapy or discontinuation. No Hy’s law cases in pivotal trials. CLEAR Outcomes: confirmed ALT/AST >3× ULN in 1.6% vs 1.0%.
Angioedema (post-marketing)RareVariableDiscontinue permanently. Reported in post-marketing surveillance along with wheezing, rash, and urticaria.
Cholelithiasis2% (vs 1% placebo in CLEAR)Months to yearsAssess for biliary symptoms. Manage surgically if symptomatic. Likely related to altered cholesterol metabolism in bile.
Discontinuation Discontinuation Rates
Primary Hyperlipidemia Trials
11% vs 8% placebo
Top reasons: Muscle spasms (0.5%), diarrhea (0.4%), pain in extremity (0.3%)
CLEAR Outcomes CV Trial
11% vs 10% placebo
Overall AEs: 86.3% bempedoic acid vs 85.0% placebo reported any treatment-emergent AE
Management Focus: Hyperuricemia and Gout Prevention

Hyperuricemia is the most clinically significant adverse effect unique to bempedoic acid. The mechanism is pharmacological (OAT2 inhibition in renal tubules), not structural kidney injury. Before initiation, check baseline uric acid and gout history. Patients with prior gout face an 11.2% risk of gout events (vs 1.7% on placebo) and require careful risk-benefit assessment. Uric acid elevations typically appear within 4 weeks, persist throughout treatment, and normalize after discontinuation. If gout develops, initiate standard urate-lowering therapy; bempedoic acid does not necessarily need to be discontinued if gout is adequately managed.

Int

Drug Interactions

Bempedoic acid is not metabolized by CYP450 enzymes and is not a CYP substrate, inhibitor, or inducer. However, it weakly inhibits hepatic uptake transporters OATP1B1 and OATP1B3, which are involved in the hepatic clearance of several statins. This transporter-mediated interaction results in clinically significant increases in simvastatin and pravastatin exposure, and modest increases in atorvastatin and rosuvastatin exposure. Bempedoic acid also inhibits renal OAT2, which explains the increases in serum uric acid and creatinine (FDA PI).

Major Simvastatin
MechanismOATP1B1/1B3 inhibition increases simvastatin acid AUC ~2-fold and Cmax ~1.5-fold
EffectIncreased risk of simvastatin-related myopathy and rhabdomyolysis at higher statin exposures
ManagementAvoid simvastatin doses >20 mg daily when co-prescribed with bempedoic acid (FDA PI)
FDA PI / DDI Study
Major Pravastatin
MechanismOATP1B1/1B3 inhibition increases pravastatin acid AUC ~2-fold and Cmax ~2-fold
EffectIncreased risk of pravastatin-related myopathy
ManagementAvoid pravastatin doses >40 mg daily when co-prescribed with bempedoic acid (FDA PI)
FDA PI / DDI Study
Moderate Atorvastatin
MechanismWeak OATP1B1/1B3 inhibition increases atorvastatin and/or metabolite AUC ~1.7-fold
EffectGenerally within individual statin exposure variability; low additional myopathy risk
ManagementNo dose adjustment required per FDA PI. Monitor for muscle symptoms as with any statin use.
FDA PI / DDI Study
Moderate Rosuvastatin
MechanismWeak OATP1B1/1B3 inhibition increases rosuvastatin and/or metabolite AUC ~1.7-fold
EffectGenerally within individual statin exposure variability
ManagementNo dose adjustment required. Monitor for muscle symptoms.
FDA PI / DDI Study
Minor Ezetimibe
MechanismEzetimibe AUC/Cmax increased <20%; total ezetimibe (parent + glucuronide) AUC ~1.6-fold
EffectNot clinically meaningful; combination (Nexlizet) is FDA-approved
ManagementNo dose adjustment. Bempedoic acid + ezetimibe combination provides additive LDL-C lowering.
FDA PI
Minor Warfarin / Metformin / Oral Contraceptives
MechanismBempedoic acid is not a CYP2C9 inhibitor or inducer
EffectNo effect on warfarin, metformin, or Ortho-Novum 1/35 pharmacokinetics
ManagementNo dose adjustments required for any of these drugs
FDA PI / DDI Studies
Mon

Monitoring

  • Lipid Panel 8–12 weeks after initiation; then per clinical need
    Routine
    FDA PI specifies analyzing lipid levels within 8–12 weeks. Maximum LDL-C lowering effect occurs by Week 4. Reassess at 6–12 months to confirm sustained response.
  • Serum Uric Acid Baseline, then periodically as clinically indicated
    Routine
    Elevations typically appear within first 4 weeks. Mean placebo-adjusted increase ~0.8 mg/dL. In CLEAR Outcomes, 16% developed hyperuricemia. Particularly important in patients with prior gout history (gout risk 11.2% in this subgroup). Monitor for signs/symptoms of gout.
  • Hepatic Function Baseline; if clinically indicated
    Trigger-based
    AST >3× ULN occurred in 1.4% vs 0.4% placebo. Most elevations transient. In CLEAR Outcomes, confirmed ALT/AST >3× ULN in 1.6% vs 1.0%. No hepatic failure reported. Assess if symptoms of hepatotoxicity arise.
  • Renal Function Baseline; periodically
    Routine
    Mean creatinine increase of 0.05 mg/dL at Week 12 (OAT2-mediated). BUN doubled in 3.8% (vs 1.5%). CLEAR: creatinine increase ≥0.5 mg/dL in 7.1% vs 5.5%. Changes are functional, not structural, and reverse on discontinuation.
  • CBC / Hemoglobin Baseline; if symptoms develop
    Trigger-based
    Hemoglobin decrease ≥2 g/dL below LLN in 5.1% vs 2.3% (hyperlipidemia trials). Leukocyte decrease below LLN in 9.0% vs 6.7%. Generally asymptomatic. Platelet increase ≥100×10&sup9;/L in 10.1% vs 4.7% (asymptomatic, no thromboembolic excess).
  • Tendon Symptoms At each visit; ongoing clinical vigilance
    Trigger-based
    Ask about shoulder, upper arm, and heel pain. Tendon rupture 0.5% in hyperlipidemia trials (0% placebo); 1.2% vs 0.9% in CLEAR. Discontinue at first sign of rupture. Higher risk with age >60, concurrent corticosteroids or fluoroquinolones, renal failure, or prior tendon disorders.
  • Creatine Kinase If muscle symptoms develop
    Trigger-based
    CK >5× ULN in 1.0% vs 0.6% placebo. Not routinely required, but check if patients develop unexplained muscle pain, especially when combined with simvastatin or pravastatin.
CI

Contraindications & Cautions

Absolute Contraindications

  • Prior serious hypersensitivity reaction to bempedoic acid or any excipient in Nexletol — post-marketing reports include angioedema, wheezing, rash, and urticaria.

Relative Contraindications (Specialist Input Recommended)

  • Active gout or history of recurrent gout: Risk of gout was 11.2% in patients with prior gout history receiving bempedoic acid (vs 1.7% placebo). If prescribing, ensure urate-lowering therapy is optimized and discuss elevated risk with the patient.
  • History of tendon disorders or tendon rupture: FDA PI recommends avoiding bempedoic acid in patients with prior tendon disorders. If prescribed, advise rest at first sign of tendinitis and monitor closely.
  • Severe hepatic impairment (Child-Pugh C): Not studied. Bempedoic acid requires hepatic activation; impaired liver function could alter both efficacy and safety.

Use with Caution

  • Concurrent simvastatin (>20 mg) or pravastatin (>40 mg): Increased myopathy risk due to ~2-fold increase in statin exposure. Must cap doses when co-prescribing.
  • Patients >60 years on corticosteroids or fluoroquinolones: Additive tendon rupture risk factors.
  • Pregnancy: Discontinue when recognized. Mechanism-based fetal harm possible (cholesterol biosynthesis inhibition). Not teratogenic in animal studies at up to 11–12× MRHD, but adverse effects on fetal development observed at maternally toxic doses.
  • Breastfeeding: Detected in human breast milk (RID ~0.5%). Breastfeeding is not recommended during treatment.
FDA Warnings and Precautions Hyperuricemia and Tendon Rupture

Bempedoic acid carries two specific FDA warnings: (1) Hyperuricemia due to inhibition of renal OAT2, which can lead to gout (3.2% in CLEAR Outcomes vs 2.2% placebo); and (2) Tendon rupture (0.5–1.2% in trials), involving the rotator cuff, biceps, or Achilles tendons. Patients should be advised to report signs of gout (acute joint pain, swelling, redness) and tendon symptoms (pain, swelling, snapping sensation) immediately. Bempedoic acid should be discontinued at the first sign of tendon rupture.

Metabolic Advantage: No New-Onset Diabetes

Unlike statins, bempedoic acid was not associated with increased new-onset type 2 diabetes in the CLEAR Outcomes trial. In fact, Mendelian randomization studies of the ACLY gene locus predict that ACL inhibition may be associated with lower weight and no increased diabetes risk. In CLEAR Outcomes, HbA1c and fasting glucose were not adversely affected, and bempedoic acid reduced hsCRP by 22%, suggesting potential cardiometabolic benefits beyond LDL-C lowering.

Pt

Patient Counselling

Purpose of Therapy

Bempedoic acid is a once-daily tablet that lowers LDL cholesterol by blocking cholesterol production in the liver through a different mechanism than statins. It has been proven in a large clinical trial (CLEAR Outcomes, nearly 14,000 patients) to reduce the risk of heart attacks and procedures to open blocked heart arteries. It is particularly useful for patients who cannot tolerate statins or cannot take the recommended statin dose.

How to Take

Take one 180 mg tablet by mouth once daily, with or without food. Your healthcare provider will check your cholesterol levels 8–12 weeks after starting the medication to assess your response. Continue taking the tablet even if you feel well, as high cholesterol does not cause symptoms.

Gout and Joint Pain
Tell patientThis medication can raise uric acid levels in the blood, which may cause gout — a painful condition typically affecting the big toe, ankles, or other joints. This is more common in people who have had gout before. Your provider may monitor your uric acid levels.
Call prescriberContact your provider if you experience sudden, severe joint pain, swelling, warmth, or redness, particularly in the big toe or foot.
Tendon Problems
Tell patientRarely, this medication may weaken tendons, which are the strong cords connecting muscles to bones. The shoulder, upper arm (biceps), and heel (Achilles tendon) are most commonly affected. Risk is higher if you are over 60, take steroid medications, or take certain antibiotics called fluoroquinolones.
Call prescriberStop taking the medication and seek medical attention immediately if you hear or feel a snap in a tendon area, have sudden bruising after an injury in a tendon area, or are unable to move or bear weight on the affected area.
Muscle Symptoms
Tell patientBempedoic acid works differently from statins and does not typically cause the muscle pain or weakness that some people experience with statins. However, if you also take simvastatin or pravastatin, there may be a higher risk of muscle effects. Make sure your provider knows all the medications you take.
Call prescriberReport any unexplained muscle pain, tenderness, or weakness, especially if accompanied by fever or dark-colored urine.
Pregnancy and Breastfeeding
Tell patientBempedoic acid may harm a developing baby by interfering with cholesterol needed for fetal growth. If you become pregnant, notify your provider immediately. Breastfeeding is not recommended while taking this medication as the drug has been found in breast milk.
Call prescriberInform your provider immediately if you become pregnant or are planning pregnancy. Report pregnancies to Esperion at 1-833-377-7633.
Continuing Other Medications
Tell patientContinue taking any other heart or cholesterol medications your provider has prescribed unless told otherwise. Bempedoic acid works alongside other treatments. Be sure to tell your provider if you are taking simvastatin or pravastatin, as dose limits may apply.
Call prescriberDo not start, stop, or change doses of any medications without consulting your healthcare provider.
Ref

Sources

Regulatory (PI / SmPC)
  1. Esperion Therapeutics, Inc. Nexletol (bempedoic acid) tablets, for oral use. Full Prescribing Information. Ann Arbor, MI: Esperion; revised July 2025. FDA Label (2025) Primary source for all dosing, adverse reactions, PK data, drug interactions, and warnings in this monograph.
  2. Esperion Therapeutics, Inc. Nexletol (bempedoic acid) tablets. Full Prescribing Information. Ann Arbor, MI: Esperion; revised March 2024. FDA Label (2024) Label version incorporating the March 2024 CV risk reduction indication and primary prevention expansion based on CLEAR Outcomes.
Key Clinical Trials
  1. Nissen SE, Lincoff AM, Brennan D, et al. Bempedoic acid and cardiovascular outcomes in statin-intolerant patients. N Engl J Med. 2023;388(15):1353–1364. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa2215024 CLEAR Outcomes: landmark CV outcomes trial (N=13,970) demonstrating 13% MACE-4 reduction with bempedoic acid in statin-intolerant patients over median 40.6 months.
  2. Nicholls SJ, Lincoff AM, Garcia D, et al. Impact of bempedoic acid on total cardiovascular events: a prespecified analysis of the CLEAR Outcomes randomized clinical trial. JAMA Cardiol. 2024;9(4):385–392. doi:10.1001/jamacardio.2023.5618 Pre-specified analysis showing bempedoic acid reduced total MACE-4 events by 20% (HR 0.80) and total MI events by 31% (HR 0.69).
  3. Goldberg AC, Leiter LA, Stroes ESG, et al. Effect of bempedoic acid vs placebo added to maximally tolerated statins on low-density lipoprotein cholesterol in patients at high cardiovascular risk: the CLEAR Wisdom randomized clinical trial. JAMA. 2019;322(18):1780–1788. doi:10.1001/jama.2019.16585 Trial 2 (CLEAR Wisdom): 18% placebo-corrected LDL-C reduction at Week 12 in 2,230 patients with CVD or HeFH on maximally tolerated statin.
  4. Ray KK, Bays HE, Catapano AL, et al. Safety and efficacy of bempedoic acid to reduce LDL cholesterol. N Engl J Med. 2019;380(11):1022–1032. doi:10.1056/NEJMoa1803917 CLEAR Harmony trial demonstrating the safety and LDL-C-lowering efficacy of bempedoic acid added to maximally tolerated statin therapy over 52 weeks.
  5. Laufs U, Banach M, Mancini GBJ, et al. Efficacy and safety of bempedoic acid in patients with hypercholesterolemia and statin intolerance. J Am Heart Assoc. 2019;8(7):e011662. doi:10.1161/JAHA.118.011662 CLEAR Serenity trial in statin-intolerant patients showing 21% LDL-C reduction with bempedoic acid; muscle-related AE rates similar to placebo.
Guidelines
  1. Grundy SM, Stone NJ, Bailey AL, et al. 2018 AHA/ACC/AACVPR/AAPA/ABC/ACPM/ADA/AGS/APhA/ASPC/NLA/PCNA guideline on the management of blood cholesterol. Circulation. 2019;139(25):e1082–e1143. doi:10.1161/CIR.0000000000000625 Foundation guideline establishing LDL-C targets and criteria for adding non-statin therapies in high-risk patients.
  2. Mach F, Baigent C, Catapano AL, et al. 2019 ESC/EAS guidelines for the management of dyslipidaemias. Eur Heart J. 2020;41(1):111–188. doi:10.1093/eurheartj/ehz455 European guidelines placing bempedoic acid in the stepwise lipid-lowering treatment algorithm for patients unable to reach LDL-C goals.
Mechanistic / Basic Science
  1. Pinkosky SL, Newton RS, Day EA, et al. Liver-specific ATP-citrate lyase inhibition by bempedoic acid decreases LDL-C and attenuates atherosclerosis. Nat Commun. 2016;7:13457. doi:10.1038/ncomms13457 Preclinical study establishing the liver-selective mechanism of bempedoic acid via ACSVL1-dependent activation and ACL inhibition.
Pharmacokinetics / Special Populations
  1. Lalwani ND, Hanselman JC, MacDougall DE, et al. Complementary low-density lipoprotein-cholesterol lowering and pharmacokinetics of adding bempedoic acid (ETC-1002) or ezetimibe to high-dose statin therapy. Atherosclerosis. 2019;284:93–98. doi:10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2019.02.024 PK study evaluating bempedoic acid interactions with high-dose statins; supports mechanistic basis for simvastatin and pravastatin dose restrictions.
  2. Nissen SE, Lincoff AM, Brennan D, et al. Bempedoic acid for primary prevention of cardiovascular events in statin-intolerant patients. JAMA. 2023;330(2):131–140. doi:10.1001/jama.2023.9696 Pre-specified CLEAR Outcomes subgroup analysis demonstrating CV event reduction in primary prevention patients without established CVD.
  3. Nicholls SJ, Lincoff AM, Bays HE, et al. Efficacy and safety of bempedoic acid among patients with and without diabetes. Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol. 2023;11(12):956–966. doi:10.1016/S2213-8587(23)00316-9 Pre-specified analysis confirming bempedoic acid does not increase new-onset diabetes risk and may lower HbA1c; consistent CV benefit in diabetic and non-diabetic patients.