Abstract

Since the Framingham Heart Study solidified cholesterol as a causative agent in the development of coronary heart disease there has been an explosion of research in the field of lipidology. Many therapeutic options have come and gone as we have been refining the goals of therapy to match the mortality outcome data of large clinical trials. A new frontier has emerged with the introduction of the PCSK9 inhibitors that are able with monthly injections to lower LDL cholesterol >60% with favorable side effect profiles and recently published favorable mortality data. This ushers in a whole new era of cholesterol management. Life insurance medical directors will need to be informed of how these drugs are being used and for conditions such as homozygous hypercholesterolemia, a condition with a very high mortality risk, and for new genetic analysis of affected patients, who are not as rare as once thought. This article provides the background about the development of these drugs, their expanded indications, how they may slip through the cracks of prescription drug (Rx) database inquiries, and touches on therapies in development beyond this class of medications. Medicine is an evolving field. With the new gene editing CRISPR technology it will truly be transformational for these genetically driven conditions with the potential for curative therapy. If curative therapy comes to pass it will, of course, have favorable implications for our evolving life insurance guidelines.

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