Elevated lipoprotein(a) Lp(a) is independently associated with increased cardiovascular risk. However, treatment options for elevated Lp(a) are limited. Alirocumab, a monoclonal antibody to ...proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9, reduced low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) by up to 62% from baseline in phase 3 studies, with adverse event rates similar between alirocumab and controls. We evaluated the effect of alirocumab on serum Lp(a) using pooled data from the phase 3 ODYSSEY program: 4,915 patients with hypercholesterolemia from 10 phase 3 studies were included. Eight studies evaluated alirocumab 75 mg every 2 weeks (Q2W), with possible increase to 150 mg Q2W at week 12 depending on LDL-C at week 8 (75/150 mg Q2W); the other 2 studies evaluated alirocumab 150-mg Q2W from the outset. Comparators were placebo or ezetimibe. Eight studies were conducted on a background of statins, and 2 studies were carried out with no statins. Alirocumab was associated with significant reductions in Lp(a), regardless of starting dose and use of concomitant statins. At week 24, reductions from baseline were 23% to 27% with alirocumab 75/150-mg Q2W and 29% with alirocumab 150-mg Q2W (all comparisons p <0.0001 vs controls). Reductions were sustained over 78 to 104 weeks. Lp(a) reductions with alirocumab were independent of race, gender, presence of familial hypercholesterolemia, baseline Lp(a), and LDL-C concentrations, or use of statins. In conclusion, in addition to marked reduction in LDL-C, alirocumab leads to a significant and sustained lowering of Lp(a).
Background Nonadherence to cardiovascular medications, including daily, oral statin therapy, negatively impacts outcomes in patients requiring low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C)-lowering ...therapy. The proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 inhibitor alirocumab also reduces LDL-C, but has a different mode of administration (subcutaneous injection). Objective The objective of the study was to assess long-term adherence to alirocumab 75 or 150 mg, given every 2 weeks, in phase III trials of patients with sub-optimally controlled hypercholesterolemia. Methods Data were pooled from 6 ODYSSEY trials (n = 4212) with double-blind treatment durations of 52 to 104 weeks. Adherence was reported as percent of days receiving injections according to dosing schedule and categorized into 100% adherence, below-planned dosing, above-planned dosing, and both below- and above-planned dosing. Overall adherence was calculated as 100 (percent of days with below-planned dosing + percent of days with above-planned dosing). Safety of alirocumab and effect on LDL-C levels were also evaluated. Results Adherence was analyzed for 4197 patients (n = 2786 alirocumab; n = 1411 control). Mean overall adherence was high (alirocumab 98.0%; control 97.8%). Among patients receiving alirocumab, 45.7% were 100% adherent, 20.4% had below-planned dosing, 2.9% had above-planned dosing, and 31.1% had both below- and above-planned dosing. Mean percent reduction in LDL-C (baseline to Week 52) was 45.8% to 61.9%, depending on alirocumab dose, and was comparable across adherence categories. Treatment-emergent adverse events leading to alirocumab discontinuation were infrequent and included myalgia and injection-site reactions (<1% each). Conclusions Alirocumab injections were associated with a high level of adherence over ≥1 year. Infrequent below- or above-planned dosing had minimal impact on LDL-C reductions.