Michel Farnier1, Helen M Colhoun2, William J Sasiela3, Jay M Edelberg4, Gaëlle Asset5, Jennifer G Robinson6. 1. Lipid Clinic, Point Médical, Dijon, France; Department of Cardiology, CHU Dijon Bourgogne, Dijon, France. Electronic address: michelfarnier@nerim.net. 2. University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK. 3. Regeneron Pharmaceuticals, Inc., Tarrytown, NY, USA. 4. Sanofi, Bridgewater, NJ, USA. 5. Sanofi, Chilly-Mazarin, France. 6. University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA.
Abstract
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 percentage 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 - (percentage of days with below-planned dosing + percentage 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 percentage 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.
RCT Entities:
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 percentage 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 - (percentage of days with below-planned dosing + percentage 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 percentage 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.
Authors: Maria Mytilinaiou; Ioannis Kyrou; Mike Khan; Dimitris K Grammatopoulos; Harpal S Randeva Journal: Front Pharmacol Date: 2018-07-12 Impact factor: 5.810
Authors: Emmanuelar O Igweonu-Nwakile; Safina Ali; Salomi Paul; Shreyas Yakkali; Sneha Teresa Selvin; Sonu Thomas; Viktoriya Bikeyeva; Ahmed Abdullah; Aleksandra Radivojevic; Anas A Abu Jad; Anvesh Ravanavena; Chetna Ravindra; Prachi Balani Journal: Cureus Date: 2022-09-13