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This observational, multicenter, retrospective and prospective study aims to evaluate the impact of intensified lipid-lowering therapy including Evinacumab on coronary atherosclerotic plaque burden in patients with Homozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia (HoFH).
HoFH is a rare genetic disorder characterized by extremely elevated low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) levels from early life and a markedly increased risk of premature atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Despite combination lipid-lowering therapy, many patients do not achieve recommended LDL-C targets and remain at high cardiovascular risk.
Evinacumab, a monoclonal antibody targeting angiopoietin-like protein 3 (ANGPTL3), has demonstrated significant LDL-C reduction in clinical trials. However, real-world evidence on its impact on coronary plaque progression is limited.
The study will compare HoFH patients receiving intensified lipid-lowering therapy including Evinacumab with patients receiving conventional lipid-lowering therapy without Evinacumab. Coronary plaque burden and phenotype will be assessed using coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) performed as part of routine clinical practice.
Approximately 52 patients will be enrolled across European centers. The primary objective is to evaluate changes in non-calcified coronary plaque volume between baseline and 18-24 months' follow-up. Secondary objectives include evaluation of total plaque burden, high-risk plaque characteristics, and LDL-C reduction. Exploratory analyses will assess patient-reported outcomes, pericoronary adipose tissue characteristics, and supravalvular atherosclerosis.
All data are collected from routine clinical care. No additional procedures are mandated by the protocol. This study aims to generate real-world imaging evidence on the effect of intensified lipid-lowering therapy including Evinacumab on coronary atherosclerosis in HoFH.
Full description
This is a multicenter, international, non-profit, observational study with retrospective and prospective data collection evaluating the real-world impact of intensified lipid-lowering therapy including Evinacumab on coronary atherosclerosis in patients with Homozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia (HoFH).
Background and Rationale
HoFH is characterized by markedly elevated LDL-C levels due to impaired LDL receptor function, leading to accelerated and diffuse atherosclerosis and early cardiovascular morbidity and mortality. Despite aggressive combination therapy (statins, ezetimibe, PCSK9 inhibitors, lomitapide, and lipoprotein apheresis), most patients fail to reach LDL-C targets.
Evinacumab is a fully human monoclonal antibody directed against ANGPTL3 and lowers LDL-C independently of LDL receptor activity. Clinical trials have demonstrated approximately 50% LDL-C reduction in HoFH patients. However, the effect of Evinacumab on coronary plaque burden and phenotype in real-world clinical practice has not been systematically evaluated.
Coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) allows non-invasive quantification of total plaque burden, differentiation of calcified and non-calcified plaque, and identification of high-risk plaque features. Imaging-based plaque assessment represents a validated surrogate of atherosclerosis progression and cardiovascular risk.
Study Design
This is a non-interventional, observational study conducted in approximately 25 European centers. The study includes both retrospective data (up to 30 months prior to enrollment) and prospective follow-up (up to 24 months).
Patients are allocated to cohorts based exclusively on routine clinical care decisions:
No therapeutic interventions are mandated or modified by the study protocol.
Study Population
Approximately 52 patients are expected to be enrolled (approximately 35 in the intensified treatment group and 17 in the conventional treatment group). Eligible patients must have a clinical or genetic diagnosis of HoFH and available baseline and follow-up CCTA scans performed according to routine clinical practice.
Objectives
Primary Objective:
To assess whether intensification of lipid-lowering therapy including Evinacumab is associated with stabilization or regression of coronary atherosclerotic plaques compared with conventional therapy, as measured by change in percent non-calcified plaque volume (NCPV) between baseline and follow-up CCTA.
Secondary Objectives:
Exploratory Objectives:
Imaging Analysis
CCTA scans performed in routine care will be analyzed centrally using standardized, FDA-cleared artificial intelligence-based quantitative software. Blinded core laboratory analysis will ensure consistency across sites.
Statistical Considerations
The primary endpoint is the annualized change in percent NCPV from baseline to 18-24 months. Between-group comparisons will be performed using appropriate parametric or non-parametric tests. Secondary and exploratory endpoints will be analyzed descriptively and comparatively.
Safety
As a non-interventional study, safety data will be collected from routine clinical documentation. Treatment decisions remain under the responsibility of the treating physician.
Conclusion
This study will provide real-world imaging data on the effect of intensified lipid-lowering therapy including Evinacumab on coronary plaque burden and phenotype in HoFH patients. The findings may contribute to optimizing cardiovascular risk management strategies in this high-risk population.
Enrollment
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria (intensified treatment group - Evinacumab):
Inclusion criteria (conventional treatment group - No Evinacumab)
Willing and able to provide written informed consent form/assent form for the use of retrospective and prospective data.
Male or female patients aged ≥12 years old at time of enrolment (exception for Italy and France ≥18 years).
Clinical or genetic diagnosis of Homozygous Familial Hypercholesterolemia (HoFH) according to the consensus statement by Cuchel et al, 2023; EHJ (14).
Patients with HoFH on standard lipid-lowering therapy (statins, ezetimibe, PCSK9i and/or other agents or treatment) at stable dose for at least 30 days before a baseline CCTA and with a follow-up CCTA after 18-24 months from the baseline one.
LDL-cholesterol ≥ 140 mg/dl (3.5 mmol/L) despite lipid-lowering treatment.
Exclusion criteria (intensified treatment group - Evinacumab)
Exclusion criteria (conventional treatment group - No Evinacumab)
52 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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