Courtesy of Morehouse School of Medicine
Sheila Thorne spoke with Elizabeth Ofili, MD, MPH, FACC, Professor of Medicine and Principal Investigator of the RCMI Coordinating Center at Morehouse School of Medicine, about how new initiatives are overcoming the hurdles of clinical research during this yearâs Black Health Matters Winter Summit. Dr. Ofili was the first female president of the Association of Black Cardiologists, an organization founded on âbelief in the need to bring special attention to the adverse impact of cardiovascular disease on African Americans.â
Thorne asked Dr. Ofili about the emerging partnership between Morehouse School of Medicine, the Association of Black Cardiologists, and Amgen. The three organizations have come together to research the association between lipoprotein (a) and cardiovascular risk in Black populations.
What is a lipoprotein (a)?
According to the CDC, âHigh levels of lipoprotein (a) increase your likelihood of having a heart attack, a stroke, and aortic stenosis, especially if you have familial hypercholesterolemia or signs of coronary heart disease.â
âAs a cardiologist for years, we knew about the dangers of lipoprotein, little a,â said Dr. Ofili. âThen the next thing that comes out of everybodyâs mouth is, but we donât know what to do about it.â She explained that the presence of high levels of the protein can be recognized in childhood. âItâs a genetically determined risk factor, and then we donât know how to get it down. Whatever level you were born with stays with you.â
The partnership aims to study the protein and the similar characteristics associated with its presence. Dr. Ofili paused to acknowledge the people at Amgen who contributed to the ongoing project, beaming at them in the audience.
Why was Morehouse School of Medicine chosen?
She explained that Amgen wanted to prioritize creating connections to âcommunity-facing physicians, who see the majority of patientsâ affected by the issues Amgen is researching. âAt the end of the day, we wanted to get to these practitioners, the physicians across the country, [because] theyâre seeing more African American patients,â said Dr. Ofili. Doctors who engage with the Black community and the Black patients they see are not frequently centered in large-scale clinical research. âThey donât get invited to do these studies,â she added. âThey do not get invited.â
Thorne noted that some reasons for the hesitancy mentioned in the vaccine session held earlier that morning could apply to reluctance to engage in clinical research. âBlacks historically have been reluctant and resistant to volunteer for clinical research for good reason. History, unfortunately, has not been a friend to the community,â she said.
Dr. Ofili clarified that the studyâs goal at the heart of the partnership is to focus on how Black people are impacted by studying their progress. âWe, at the very least, need to understand how itâs affecting Blacks,â she said. Physicians cannot make targeted recommendations for their therapy without studying a select group of people on a large scale. âThere are no drugs involved, but we are going to get information and connect it to everything else.â
Who can benefit from this study?
The study is intentionally broad to gain the most information to develop new therapies. âWeâre looking at people [age] 18 and up to 85.â Amgen designed the study to benefit not only the medical community in the future but also patients who are currently struggling. It incliudes a website that offers targeted information on heart health. âWe want to be able to not only represent clinical trials, but we want to represent in care. We want to represent access to that, which is critically important. So the partnership has covered all the bases,â said Dr. Ofili.
The study has also been staffed with culturally competent physicians and researchers. âThe cultural issues have been addressed in advance,â she shared.