Nobel Hype

You will note in the above description of the the work of Brown and Goldstein it is claimed that their "discovery of the mechanism by which cholesterol accumulates in the bloodstream, leading to a condition known as atherosclerosis, which is responsible for more than half the deaths in the United States by heart attack or stroke."

In reality, the vast majority of patients with atherosclerosis in the general population do not have a deficiency of LDL receptors, their blood cholesterol is not markedly elevated and they do not have the clinical characteristics of those very rare patients with congenital LDL receptor abnormalities such as xanthomas. This is not to say that their discoveries have major scientific interest in terms of biochemical regulation. But their relation to common diseases is tenuous.

In contrast to the hype surrounding the Nobel Prize, here is what Brown and Goldstein said themselves in a review in Science.

"How does elevated plasma LDL produce the complex lesions of atherosclerosis, with their hallmark features of inflammation, necrosis, cellular proliferation, and lipid deposition? The answer may lie in the unsaturated fatty acids of the cholesteryl esters and phospholipids of which LDL is composed. One of these, arachidonic acid, is the precursor of inflammatory prostaglandins. Within the artery wall other unsaturated fatty acids of LDL can undergo oxidation to generate toxic aldehydes and epoxides that induce the production of inflammatory cytokines. Thus, although the principal job of LDL is to transport cholesterol, and although its metabolism is regulated in response to cellular demands for cholesterol, the pathological consequence of its accumulation may be traced to the localized deposition of its fatty acids at sites of damage in artery walls."

In other words, according to Nobel Prize winners in cholesterol metabolsim, atherosclerosis is not a disease of cholesterol metabolism but a disease of fatty acid modification of the cholesterol package, LDL. Statins have no know effect on this process and therefore should not be expected to have a major effect on plaque development and indeed they don't.

Brown and Goldstein and Nobel Hype

A xanthoma on the thumb of a patient with congenital LDL receptor deficiency

99.99% of patients with coronary atherosclerosis in the general poppulation do not have the LDL receptor deficiency and do not have xanthomas.