
Results from a recent cohort study suggest that evolocumab was associated with a 50% reduction in low-density lipoprotein (LDL-C) levels in more than 90% of patients, and at least 30% in more than 99.8.% of patients.
The researchers, noting in their report that “little is known about the heterogeneity in LDL-C levels lowering using the proprotein convertase subtilisin kexkin 9 (PCSK9) medications,” conducted the analysis to characterize the relationship. The cohort analysis, evaluating the magnitude of the interindividual variability of LDL-C reduction with evolocumab, included a look at 21,768 patients from the FOURIER trial (10,902 in the evolocumab group). Patients in the FOURIER trial had stable atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease and were on statin medication. The main study outcome of interest was the percent reduction in LDL-C with evolocumab.
Data from FOURIER show PCSK9 inhibition with evolocumab provides robust LDL-C reduction in >90% of patients https://t.co/KQCYIj0fKH @AqamarMD @JAMACardio
— TIMI Study Group (@TIMIStudyGroup) December 13, 2018