Studies test whether gene-editing can fix high cholesterol. For now,
take your medicine
[February 12, 2026]
By LAURAN NEERGAARD
WASHINGTON (AP) — Scientists are testing an entirely new way to fight
heart disease: a gene-editing treatment that might offer a one-time fix
for high cholesterol.
It’s very early stage research, tried in only a few dozen people so far.
But gene-editing approaches being developed by two companies show hints
that switching off certain genes could dramatically lower
artery-clogging cholesterol, raising hopes of one day being able to
prevent heart attacks without having to take pills.
“People want a fix, not a bandage,” said Dr. Luke Laffin, a preventive
cardiologist at the Cleveland Clinic. After co-authoring a promising
study published in the New England Journal of Medicine, he said he was
flooded with queries about how to participate in the next clinical
trial.
Everyone needs a certain amount of cholesterol. But too much, especially
a “bad” kind called LDL cholesterol, builds plaque in the artery walls
and is a main driver of heart attacks and strokes. Cardiovascular
disease is the nation’s — and world’s — leading killer.
Millions take cholesterol-lowering medicines such as statins, the
cornerstone of treatment. But many still struggle to lower their
cholesterol enough, and sticking with the drugs for life is difficult,
with some quitting because of side effects.

Why genes matter for cholesterol
While your diet contributes, your liver produces the cholesterol your
body needs, according to the American Heart Association, and genes play
a role in how it's managed. Some people inherit genes that trigger very
high cholesterol. Others have cholesterol that’s naturally extremely low
over their lifetime and seldom develop heart disease.
Years ago, Dr. Kiran Musunuru, a cardiologist now at the University of
Pennsylvania, reported some of those lucky people harbor a mutation that
turns off a gene named ANGPTL3, lowering their levels of both LDL
cholesterol and another bad fat, triglycerides.
Separately, geneticists at UT Southwestern Medical Center found still
other people’s extremely low LDL was due to loss of function of another
gene named PCSK9.
“It’s a natural experiment in what would happen if we actually changed
the gene,” said the Cleveland Clinic’s Dr. Steven Nissen, who with
Laffin oversaw an ANGPTL3 study funded by Swiss-based CRISPR
Therapeutics.
What early gene-editing studies can and can't show
Today there are injected medicines that block proteins produced by the
PCSK9 and ANGPTL3 genes in the liver, thus helping the body clear away
cholesterol. The new research uses CRISPR, the Nobel Prize-winning
gene-editing tool, to try switching off one of those genes in people at
high risk from uncontrolled cholesterol.
In one study, 15 adults received a single infusion of tiny particles
that carried the CRISPR tool to the liver, switching off the ANGPTL3
gene inside that organ’s cells. Within two weeks, those getting the
highest dose saw their LDL and triglyceride levels both drop by half,
Laffin and Nissen reported in November.
Boston’s Verve Therapeutics, a subsidiary of pharmaceutical giant Eli
Lilly, earlier reported that its PCSK9-targeted editing infusion cut LDL
cholesterol by a similar amount in a small study.
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 Both companies’ initial studies were
done in Australia, the U.K. and other countries. A Lilly
spokesperson said U.S. study sites are opening. Nissen said a
next-step study of CRISPR Therapeutics' approach should start later
this year, with sites yet to be announced. Each company is pursuing
several gene targets.
While people with naturally nonfunctioning ANGPTL3
or PCSK9 have no apparent bad consequences, longer studies of the
gene-editing approach in far more people are needed, said Penn’s
Musunuru, who co-founded Verve. He said some participants in an
earlier Verve study have been tracked for two years, their
cholesterol still lowered.
Gene editing is considered permanent. If edited liver cells
reproduce, their progeny contain the altered genes, and Musunuru
said the edits have lasted a lifetime in mice.
There are major safety questions to be answered, cautioned Dr.
Joseph Wu of Stanford University, who wasn’t involved in either
study. CRISPR-based therapies for any disease haven’t been used
enough to know long-term safety — and the particles carrying the
gene-editing tool can irritate or inflame the liver, he said.
Another unknown is whether gene-editing hits only the intended
target.
That's why for now, studies largely target people at very high risk.
What to do now for better heart health
Whether gene editing eventually pans out, the American Heart
Association lists eight key factors for better heart health that
everyone should work on now.
Some involve lifestyle. Eat a heart-healthy diet with lots of fruits
and vegetables, whole grains and healthy fats like those found in
nuts. Saturated fats can increase cholesterol while healthier diets
can lower LDL levels and raise levels of HDL, the so-called good
cholesterol.
Also, be physically active, as exercise can increase good HDL and
help lower triglycerides.
Maintain a healthy weight. If you smoke, quit. And get enough sleep.
On the medical side, control your blood pressure — levels measuring
less than 120 over 80 are optimal. Diabetes also harms the heart so
control your blood sugar.

As for cholesterol, keeping levels of that “bad” LDL kind at 100 is
considered fine for healthy people. But once people develop high
cholesterol or heart disease, guidelines recommend lowering it to at
least 70, even lower for those at very high risk.
When lifestyle changes aren't enough, statin pills like Lipitor,
Crestor or their cheap generic equivalents block some of the liver’s
production of cholesterol and are highly effective at lowering LDL.
There are a few other pill options for people who need additional
help or can’t take statins, as well as some injected medicines.
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