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Effect of a PCSK9 inhibitor and a statin on cholesterol efflux capacity: A limitation of current cholesterol‐lowering treatments?

Authors :
Qidi Ying
Annalisa Ronca
Dick C. Chan
Jing Pang
Elda Favari
Gerald F. Watts
Source :
European Journal of Clinical Investigation. 52
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Wiley, 2022.

Abstract

Cellular cholesterol efflux is a key step in reverse cholesterol transport that may impact on atherosclerotic cardiovascular risk. The process may be reliant on the availability of apolipoprotein (apo) B-100-containing lipoproteins to accept cholesterol from high-density lipoprotein. Evolocumab and atorvastatin are known to lower plasma apoB-100-containing lipoproteins that could impact on cholesterol efflux capacity (CEC).We conducted a 2-by-2 factorial trial of the effects of subcutaneous evolocumab (420 mg every 2 weeks) and atorvastatin (80 mg daily) for 8 weeks on CEC in 81 healthy, normolipidaemic men. The capacity of whole plasma and apoB-depleted plasma, including ATP-binding cassette transporter A1 (ABCA1)-mediated and passive diffusion, to efflux cholesterol, was measured.Evolocumab and atorvastatin independently decreased whole plasma CEC (main effect p .01 for both). However, there were no significant effects of evolocumab and atorvastatin on apoB-depleted plasma, ABCA1-mediated and passive diffusion-mediated CEC (p .05 in all). In the three intervention groups combined, the reduction in whole plasma CEC was significantly correlated with the corresponding reduction in plasma apoB-100 concentration (r = .339, p .01). In the evolocumab monotherapy group, the reduction in whole plasma CEC was also significantly correlated with the corresponding reduction in plasma lipoprotein(a) concentration (r = .487, p .05).In normolipidaemic men, evolocumab and atorvastatin decrease the capacity of whole plasma to efflux cellular cholesterol. These effects may be chiefly owing to a fall in the availability of apoB-100-containing lipoproteins. Reduction in circulating lipoprotein(a) may also contribute to the decrease in whole plasma cholesterol efflux with evolocumab monotherapy.

Details

ISSN :
13652362 and 00142972
Volume :
52
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Journal of Clinical Investigation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8f99904ae4d616212e68011194e9d20c