Title
Alirocumab, evinacumab, and atorvastatin triple therapy regresses plaque lesions and improves lesion composition in mice
Author
Pouwer, M.G.
Pieterman, E.J.
Worms, N.
Keijzer, N.
Jukema, J.W.
Gromada, J.
Gusarova, V.
Princen, H.M.G.
Publication year
2020
Abstract
Atherosclerosis-related cardiovascular disease causes nearly 20 million deaths annually. Most patients are treated after plaques develop, so therapies must regress existing lesions. Current therapies reduce plaque volume, but targeting all apoB-containing lipoproteins with intensive combinations that include alirocumab or evinacumab-monoclonal antibodies against cholesterol-regulating PCSK9 and ANGPTL3-may provide more benefit. We investigated the effect of such lipid-lowering interventions on atherosclerosis in APOE*3-Leiden.CETP mice, a well-established model for hyperlipidemia. Mice were fed a Western-type diet for 13 weeks and thereafter matched into a baseline group (sacrificed at 13 weeks) and five groups that received diet alone (control) or with treatment-atorvastatin; atorvastatin and alirocumab; atorvastatin and evinacumab; or atorvastatin, alirocumab, and evinacumab (triple therapy)-for 25 weeks. We measured effects on cholesterol levels, plaque composition and morphology, monocyte adherence, and macrophage proliferation. All interventions reduced plasma total cholesterol (37% with atorvastatin to 80% with triple treatment; all p < 0.001). Triple treatment decreased non-HDL cholesterol to 1.0 mmol/L (91% difference from control; p < 0.001). Atorvastatin reduced atherosclerosis progression by 28% versus control (p < 0.001); double treatment completely blocked progression and diminished lesion severity. Triple treatment regressed lesion size versus baseline in the thoracic aorta by 50% and the aortic root by 36% (both p < 0.05 vs baseline); decreased macrophage accumulation through reduced proliferation; and abated lesion severity. Thus, high-intensive cholesterol-lowering triple treatment targeting all apoB-containing lipoproteins regresses atherosclerotic lesion area and improves lesion composition in mice, making it a promising potential approach for treating atherosclerosis.
Subject
APOE*3-Leiden.CETP mice
Angiopoietin-like proteins
Antibodies
Apolipoproteins
Atherosclerosis
Cardiovascular disease
Drug therapy/Hypolipidemic drugs
Macrophages / monocytes
PCSK9
Regression
Biomedical Innovation
Healthy Living
Life
MHR - Metabolic Health Research
ELSS - Earth, Life and Social Sciences
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http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:66d4ad7a-f9fe-4d45-b241-71fea68ebf33
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1194/jlr.ra119000419
TNO identifier
871907
Source
Journal of Lipid Research, 61 (61), 365-375
Document type
article