STAT+: Pharmalittle: We’re reading about a Lilly gene therapy for cholesterol, three new Lilly deals, and more
Why this matters: health reporting relevant to everyday decisions and well-being.
Rise and shine, everyone, another busy day is on the way. And it is getting off to a good start here on the Pharmalot campus, where we have clear blue skies and chilly breezes greeting us today. Who could ask for anything more? Actually, we could —&#x A0;it is time to reheat the coffee kettle for another cup of stimulation. Our choice today is strawberry creme, a pantry favorite. Please feel free to join us. Remember, no prescription is required and no rebates are involved. And now, here are your tidbits. Hope you have a productive and meaningful day, and, as always, please do keep in touch. We have adjusted our settings to accept postcards and telegrams. … Eli Lilly reported that a high dose of its gene-editing therapy reduced cholesterol levels by 62% in participants in a Phase 1 clinical trial, an early but encouraging test of whether a one-time treatment may one day help people seeking to lower their LDL, or “bad,” cholesterol, STAT writes. Lilly acquired the therapy in its $1 billion buyout of Verve Therapeutics last year. There were no treatment-related serious adverse events in the study, a notable finding given that Verve had to shelve its first candidate over safety concerns. Lilly now plans to begin a Phase 2 trial in an unspecified number of patients and will likely need to then run Phase 3 trials in thousands of patients for the treatment to earn approval.  Eli Lilly agreed to buy three early- and mid-stage vaccine developers in deals that could cost up to nearly $4 billion, STAT notes. The drugmaker, which is rich with cash from its booming GLP-1 business, in recent months has picked up companies working on cancer, autoimmune diseases, and sleep disorders, all for under $10 billion each. The new acquisitions — Curevo, LimmaTech Biologics, and Vaccine Company — will give Lilly a much larger footprint in infectious diseases, an area that has not recently been a priority for the company. Lil