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About
Evolocumab has been able to reduce the incidence of cardiovascular events in patients that had at least one cardiovascular risk factor [28]. In patients with chronic HFrEF, as we mentioned before, treatment with statins is not recommended as it has not shown benefits in improving its prognosis. However, CAD control stands as an approach that could improve the course of the disease by preventing microlesions that further weaken the heart. A recent multicenter study, the BIOSTAT-CHF [3436], was performed to determine whether the PCSK9-LDLR axis could predict risk in patients with HF. A multivariate analysis, which included BIOSTAT risk scores, LDLR, and statin treatment as covariates, revealed a positive linear association between PCSK9 levels and the risk of mortality and the composite endpoint (death or HF-related hospitalization). A similar analysis for LDLR revealed a negative association with mortality and the composite endpoint. Future studies must assess whether PCSK9 inhibition will result in better outcomes in HF.
There is an unmet clinical need: blockade of the neurohormonal activation has provided advances in patients with HFrEF, yet mortality and morbidity remain unacceptably high. Approaching a strict control of lipid levels and CAD with evolocumab in stable HFrEF of ischemic ethology may represent a complementary pathophysiological pathway to reduce mortality and morbidity. The burden of CAD provides a solid rationale for testing the value of evolocumab in HF patients.
Therefore, a pilot trial is proposed to evaluate the beneficial effect of evolocumab by surrogate biological markers before considering an event analysis study.
Evolocumab reduces the risk of cardiovascular events in patients with established atherosclerotic disease, so this drug could play a role in HFrEF of ischemic etiology, by limiting macro- and micro-vascular coronary disease progression. In HFrEF patients due to ischemic etiology, there is a continuous troponin release due to persistent myocyte injury, which has been associated with adverse outcomes. Our hypothesis is that evolocumab may have the potential to reduce circulating hs-TnT levels, as a surrogate of myocyte injury due to atheroma progression in HFrEF. A positive result in this EVO-HF Pilot study may lead to the set-up of a large-scale multicenter prospective and randomized events study analyzing the role of lipid-lowering treatment by means of evolocumab in HFrEF of ischemic etiology
Full description
Evolocumab has been able to reduce the incidence of cardiovascular events in patients that had at least one cardiovascular risk factor [28]. In patients with chronic HFrEF, as we mentioned before, treatment with statins is not recommended as it has not shown benefits in improving its prognosis. However, CAD control stands as an approach that could improve the course of the disease by preventing microlesions that further weaken the heart. A recent multicenter study, the BIOSTAT-CHF [3436], was performed to determine whether the PCSK9-LDLR axis could predict risk in patients with HF. A multivariate analysis, which included BIOSTAT risk scores, LDLR, and statin treatment as covariates, revealed a positive linear association between PCSK9 levels and the risk of mortality and the composite endpoint (death or HF-related hospitalization). A similar analysis for LDLR revealed a negative association with mortality and the composite endpoint. Future studies must assess whether PCSK9 inhibition will result in better outcomes in HF.
There is an unmet clinical need: blockade of the neurohormonal activation has provided advances in patients with HFrEF, yet mortality and morbidity remain unacceptably high. Approaching a strict control of lipid levels and CAD with evolocumab in stable HFrEF of ischemic ethology may represent a complementary pathophysiological pathway to reduce mortality and morbidity. The burden of CAD provides a solid rationale for testing the value of evolocumab in HF patients.
Evolocumab reduces the risk of cardiovascular events in patients with established atherosclerotic disease, so this drug could play a role in HFrEF of ischemic etiology, by limiting macro- and micro-vascular coronary disease progression. In HFrEF patients due to ischemic etiology, there is a continuous troponin release due to persistent myocyte injury, which has been associated with adverse outcomes. Our hypothesis is that evolocumab may have the potential to reduce circulating hs-TnT levels, as a surrogate of myocyte injury due to atheroma progression in HFrEF. A positive result in this EVO-HF Pilot study may lead to the set-up of a large-scale multicenter prospective and randomized events study analyzing the role of lipid-lowering treatment by means of evolocumab in HFrEF of ischemic etiology.
Therefore, a pilot trial is proposed to evaluate the beneficial effect of evolocumab by surrogate biological markers before considering an event analysis study.
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Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Extracardiac disease with estimated life expectancy less than 1 year
Contraindication to receiving evolocumab
Hypersensitivity to the active substance or to any of the excipients
Female subject who has not used an acceptable method of birth control for at least 1 month prior to screening and/or is not willing to inform her partner of her participation in this clinical trial and to use an acceptable method of effective birth control during treatment with evolocumab and for an additional 15 weeks after the end of treatment with evolocumab, unless the female subject is permanently sterilized or postmenopausal:
A female is considered of childbearing potential unless permanently sterilized (hysterectomy, bilateral oophorectomy, or bilateral salpingectomy) or postmenopausal with menopause defined as:
Patient <18 or ≥ 81 years
Liver dysfunction (AST or ALT> 3 times the upper limit of normal value).
Severe renal dysfunction (estimated glomerular filtration rate [eGFR] < 30 ml/min/1.73m²) or renal replacement therapy at screening (CKD-EPI equation).
Coronary revascularization in the 3 months prior to randomization or pending coronary revascularization.
Previous haemorrhagic stroke
Uncontrolled hypertension (systolic blood pressure ≥ 140 or/and diastolic blood pressure ≥ 90 mmHg) either on or off therapy at screening or at baseline
Uncontrolled hypothyroidism or hyperthyroidism
Type 1 diabetes; newly diagnosed or poorly controlled type 2 diabetes (HbA1c > 8.5%)
Uncontrolled cardiac arrhythmia
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46 participants in 2 patient groups
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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