Repatha and Alcohol: What You Need to Know While on Evolocumab
Can you drink alcohol while taking Repatha (evolocumab)? Learn what the evidence says about alcohol, liver function, LDL-C, and daily life on this PCSK9 inhibitor.
Read clinical reviewTopic Hub
8 clinically reviewed articles, written and peer-reviewed by the HealthRX.com Medical Team.
Explore
Showing 8 of 8 clinical reviews.
Can you drink alcohol while taking Repatha (evolocumab)? Learn what the evidence says about alcohol, liver function, LDL-C, and daily life on this PCSK9 inhibitor.
Read clinical reviewEvidence-based guide to exercising on Repatha (evolocumab), covering safety, muscle effects, injection-site timing, and how physical activity complements PCSK9 inhibitor therapy for cholesterol management.
Read clinical reviewA clinician-reviewed guide to how Repatha (evolocumab) affects relationships, intimacy, energy, and day-to-day living, with real-world evidence, patient-reported outcomes, and practical coping strategies.
Read clinical reviewHow major life events like surgery, pregnancy, acute illness, weight changes, and travel affect your Repatha (evolocumab) dosing schedule. Evidence-based guidance for patients and clinicians.
Read clinical reviewEvidence-based nutrition guidance for patients on Repatha (evolocumab). Covers dietary patterns, specific nutrients, meal timing around injections, and foods that maximize PCSK9 inhibitor efficacy.
Read clinical reviewDoes Repatha (evolocumab) affect sleep? This evidence-based guide covers what clinical trials and patient-reported outcomes reveal about sleep quality on evolocumab, plus practical strategies for optimization.
Read clinical reviewEverything you need to know about traveling with Repatha (evolocumab): storage, TSA rules, injection timing, international travel, and daily life tips backed by clinical evidence.
Read clinical reviewA clinician-reviewed guide to managing Repatha (evolocumab) injections, side effects, storage, and daily workplace routines for patients with familial hypercholesterolemia or established ASCVD.
Read clinical review