5 research outputs found

    Management of homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia in real-world clinical practice: A report of 7 Italian patients treated in Rome with lomitapide and lipoprotein apheresis

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    Homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia (HoFH) is a rare, genetically determined condition of highly elevated low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDLC) levels. If untreated, patients do not typically survive beyond the second decade of life. Traditional lipid-lowering therapies (statins and ezetimibe) are largely ineffective in HoFH patients, and extracorporeal lipoprotein apheresis (LA) forms the mainstay of treatment. Lomitapide is a microsomal triglyceride transfer protein inhibitor approved for the treatment of HoFH as an adjunct to LA. We undertook to examine the efficacy and safety of lomitapide in 7 HoFH patients treated with LA in the Lipid Clinic and Therapeutic Apheresis Unit in Rome, Italy outside a clinical trial setting

    Toward an international consensus-Integrating lipoprotein apheresis and new lipid-lowering drugs

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    Background Despite advances in pharmacotherapy of lipid disorders, many dyslipidemic patients do not attain sufficient lipid lowering to mitigate risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Several classes of novel lipid-lowering agents are being evaluated to reduce atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk. Lipoprotein apheresis (LA) is effective in acutely lowering the plasma concentrations of atherogenic lipoproteins including low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and lipoprotein(a), and novel lipid-lowering drugs may dampen the lipid rebound effect of LA, with the possibility that LA frequency may be decreased, in some cases even be discontinued. Sources of material This document builds on current American Society for Apheresis guidelines and, for the first time, makes recommendations from summarized data of the emerging lipid-lowering drug classes (inhibitors of proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 or microsomal triglyceride transfer protein, high-density lipoprotein mimetic), including the available evidence on combination therapy with LA with respect to the management of patients with dyslipidemia. Abstract of findings Recommendations for different indications are given based on the latest evidence. However, except for lomitapide in homozygous familial hypercholesterolemia and alirocumab/evolocumab in heterozygous familial hypercholesterolemia subjects, limited data are available on the effectiveness and safety of combination therapy. More studies on combining LA with novel lipid-lowering drugs are needed. Conclusion Novel lipid-lowering agents have potential to improve the performance of LA, but more evidence is needed. The Multidisciplinary International Group for Hemapheresis TherapY and Metabolic DIsturbances Contrast scientific society aims to establish an international registry of clinical experience on LA combination therapy to expand the evidence on this treatment in individuals at high cardiovascular disease risk

    Toward an international consensus—Integrating lipoprotein apheresis and new lipid-lowering drugs

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