Designed to help you support high-risk patients along their journey to lower LDL-C and reduce the risk of another myocardial infarction, stroke, or coronary revascularization with Repatha® added to a statin. 1
This video series is sponsored by Amgen Inc.
Clinical Considerations of Repatha®
The Journey of a Repatha® Prescription
Supporting Patient Access with RepathaReady® and the Repatha® Copay Card
Repatha® is indicated:
From a pool of the 52-week trial and seven 12-week trials: Local injection site reactions occurred in 3.2% and 3.0% of Repatha®-treated and placebo-treated patients, respectively. The most common injection site reactions were erythema, pain, and bruising. Hypersensitivity reactions occurred in 5.1% and 4.7% of Repatha®-treated and placebo-treated patients, respectively. The most common hypersensitivity reactions were rash (1.0% versus 0.5% for Repatha® and placebo, respectively), eczema (0.4% versus 0.2%), erythema (0.4% versus 0.2%), and urticaria (0.4% versus 0.1%).
Among the 16,676 patients without diabetes mellitus at baseline, the incidence of new-onset diabetes mellitus during the trial was 8.1% in patients treated with Repatha® compared with 7.7% in patients that received placebo.
Appreciate the importance of lipid management for patients who have very high-risk ASCVD and the clinical data supporting Repatha® as a guideline-recommended treatment approach
Discover patient support services available with RepathaReady® and learn about the Repatha® Copay Card*
Explore the tools available to help process Repatha® prescriptions in the community pharmacy and important counseling considerations
Review several resources that are available for your patients at RepathaHCP.com to support their treatment journey with Repatha®
Repatha® is indicated:
From a pool of the 52-week trial and seven 12-week trials: Local injection site reactions occurred in 3.2% and 3.0% of Repatha®-treated and placebo-treated patients, respectively. The most common injection site reactions were erythema, pain, and bruising. Hypersensitivity reactions occurred in 5.1% and 4.7% of Repatha®-treated and placebo-treated patients, respectively. The most common hypersensitivity reactions were rash (1.0% versus 0.5% for Repatha® and placebo, respectively), eczema (0.4% versus 0.2%), erythema (0.4% versus 0.2%), and urticaria (0.4% versus 0.1%).
Among the 16,676 patients without diabetes mellitus at baseline, the incidence of new-onset diabetes mellitus during the trial was 8.1% in patients treated with Repatha® compared with 7.7% in patients that received placebo.
CV=cardiovascular.
Reference: 1. Repatha® (evolocumab) prescribing information, Amgen.
*Eligibility criteria apply. Program maximums apply. See full terms and conditions at repathaHCP.com/#copaycard.
© 2022 Amgen Inc. All rights reserved. USA-145-83461 01/22