The study confirms that pushing LDL below 55 mg/dL significantly cuts risks, but the lack of benefit for women highlights a critical gap in our medical data. It’s a win for aggressive lipid management that simultaneously exposes the limitations of one-size-fits-all cardiovascular care.
Deep Dive
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Deep Dive
Is Lower LDL Actually Better? New Research Has an AnswerAdded:
A paper just came out about intensive LDL cholesterol lowering therapy in patients with aththerosclerotic cardiovascular disease and it's one more piece of data in our whole compendium of does LDLC matter and is lower better.
Let's take a deep dive into this paper published in the New England Journal of Medicine just last month. If you're new here, I am Dr. Lily Johnston. I am a board-certified vascular surgeon who treats plaque in the arteries, but I also specialize in cardioabolic prevention. So hopefully you will never need me as a surgeon.
The paper is titled intensive LDL cholesterol targeting in atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease by doctors Kim and colleagues for the easy pave investigators. This is a group out of South Korea who published this paper. So I'll just read the background here in the abstract. Despite guideline recommendations, evidence from randomized trials evaluating the appropriate lowdensity lipoprotein cholesterol target for secondary prevention in patients with aththeroscllerotic cardiovascular disease remains limited. So already we know this is about patients who've had heart attack, stroke or pad, peripheral arterial disease and we're under trying to understand how aggressive should we be in lowering the LDLC or LDL cholesterol. Let's go through the methods here. Trial population.
So what is how are they defining ASVD and who gets to be included in the trial? Patients were 19 to 80 years of age and the definition of ASVD was previous occurrence or presence of at least one of the following. Acute coronary syndrome meaning myioardial inffection or unstable anga. Stable anga with imaging or functional studies.
coronary revascularization or other arterial revascularization, stroke or minstroke TIA or peripheral arterial disease. They excluded patients who had an LDL cholesterol less than 70 milligrams per deciliter without statin therapy. This was a randomized but it was an open label trial. So what does that mean? It means patients and providers or physicians knew which group the uh participants were assigned to. So even though they're randomized, everybody knows who's in which group. So the patients were randomized in a 1:1 fashion and they were randomized to a group where the target, the goal LDL cholesterol was less than 55 milligrams per deciliter. And the other group was less than 70 milligrams per deciliter, which if you've been paying attention is sort of what we think of as the general target for most patients with secondary prevention these days is less than 70.
Many of us who are kind of lipid nerds will be more aggressive in patients with enhanced risk factors and drive that less than 55 milligrams per deciliter.
But we don't have data about exactly which of those is better. So that was the whole point behind this trial. The patients were stratified based on acute coronary syndrome, presence or absence of diabetes, their baseline LDL cholesterol levels, and they also had random assignments to different treatment protocols. So patients were potentially on statin monotherapy or statin plus a zettobe. And if they were on statins, they could be on either ruva statin or a tova statin. Those are the two that can be eligible for highintensity statin therapy in our modern era. This gets complicated because they actually did have an option to escalate therapy in patients to PCSK9 inhibitors or other agents. We'll talk about how often that really happened and whether I think that confounds these data, but it is a little bit messy in the sense that the treatment protocol was variable despite um assignment and the real goal was just to get the cholesterol level down uh to below the goal.
And so what I've highlighted here, increasing the statin dose and adding a were recommended before consideration of PCSK9 inhibitors. So they did recommend sort of a standard escalation in statin dose then adding a zetami then going to PCSK9 inhibitors. They followed these patients for three years. Follow-up assessments were performed baseline one month one two and three years and they used the national database to validate their survival outcomes. So they have a Korean national health insurance database and they were able to adjudicate survival based on that. What was the end point of the trial? What were we actually measuring? This is another composite endpoint meaning a combination of death from cardiovascular causes, non-fatal MI or heart attack, non-fatal stroke, any revascularization or hospitalization for unstable anga at 3 years after randomization.
They had secondary endpoints including efficacy and safety measures and they also did multiple analyses of the different combinations of the endpoint and I think we'll see that a little bit later in the results. Okay.
So going down through their statistical analysis they do go through their power calculation meaning they looked at how many patients they would have to enroll.
Uh so they estimated enrollment of 3,448 patients would provide the trial 80% power to detect about a 25% lower relative risk of a primary endpoint in three years.
Okay, I'm going to scroll through this because the statistics are not that exciting, which is a good thing.
All right, results.
So patients were enrolled January 2021 through July 2022. They underwent randomization at 17 sites. This is a pretty broad-based trial and I think that's helpful in terms of understanding um the generalizability of the results. You know, if it has if it's only done at one place or two places, then you wonder would it be the same if it were done in many many places? Many many places increases our variability, but it also in my opinion improves our generalizability of our trial results.
So they achieved their enrollment targets and at baseline patients were pretty pretty well balanced. Mean age of the patients was about 65 years old and only about 21% were women. So this is again if you've heard me talk about the perils of cardiovascular research uh we know that women are generally under represented in these trials. We're this is an important point we're going to come back to because the impact of intensive lipid lowering therapy was not actually significant in women. But uh I think that that's an underpowered issue rather than well we don't know. But let's just say that they did not have uh as much representation of women in the trial as as you might like to see. Their median LDL cholesterol level at enrollment was 76 milligrams per deciliter.
and just breaking down you know what were the general criteria for inclusion most of the patients were um previous acute coronary syndrome about half had stable anga many had had revascularization 67% 3.8% 8% had a stroke or TIA and less than 10% had peripheral arterial disease.
So they go through at the different time points sort of what was the degree of patient like the number of patients who were on highintensity statin therapy versus other things. What I want to highlight down here is the number of patients who ended up on PCSK9 inhibitors was ultimately really quite small. uh PCSK9 inhibitors were in use by 0.2% of the patients in the intensive targeting group at one month and by 08% 1.4% 2.3% at 1, two and three years respectively and in the conventional targeting group it was less than 1% at 3 years. So it was 2.3% in the intensive group about 1% in the conventional group. Overall, PCSK9 inhibitors were pretty small contributor to the treatment strategy in this trial. Okay.
How many patients stopped taking their medic medications or were uh limited by side effects? A total of 110 patients, 62 in the intensive group and 48 in the conventional group, discontinued LDL cholesterol lowering therapy or underwent a downward adjustment in the intensity of therapy despite not reaching the target LDL cholesterol levels with the primary reason being an adverse event in 85 patients and um 50 in the intensive group and 35 in the conventional targeting group.
Okay, so these are the baseline characteristics here in this table.
Mostly these are going to be pretty well balanced. Again, as a randomized control trial, we would expect that to be true.
I'm not going to belabor this point. Uh just as a general observation, about 70 to 75% of the patients have high blood pressure. About 40% have a diagnosis of diabetes. Uh 23 to 25% are current smokers.
And at time of enrollment they are generally on moderate intensity statin therapy. 67 to 68% uh only 22 to 23% are in highintensity statin therapy and about less than a third 28 to 29% are onetam at baseline.
Okay.
So looking at the figures here and I have not actually gone through these results in detail yet. So, we're going to do a little uh bit of discovery journal club here together. LDL cholesterol levels. So, they are pointing out to you here with this graph what has happened as at their follow-up time, right? So, they did this one month follow-up, 12 months, 24 months, and 36 months. They're showing you that indeed there was a significant difference between the LDL cholesterol levels in the conventional targeting group and the intensive targeting group. So they did what they intended to do, which was really drop that level much lower in the intensive targeting group. And now they're going to show us the Kaplan Meyer curve of the primary endpoint events. Again, this is that combination of revascularization, cardiovascular related death or nonfatal cardiac events. And what you'll see here is that the lower line, meaning reduced levels of events, was seen in the intensive targeting group. and we start to see separation really even at six months. Now I don't know whether that would be statistically significant but uh just visually you can see that that does begin to separate um even well before the one-year mark. All right, what else do we have here in our tables?
Primary endpoint. So we had this composite event in 100 patients in the intensive targeting group. So that's 6.6% of the patients versus 147 or 9.7% of the patients in the conventional targeting group. And that is a difference of an absolute difference of 3.1 percentage points. And that is statistically significant.
If you come down here, we can now look at the individual endpoints and see what really drove that composite event. So when other people have looked at this paper, there was mention that in fact what really drove the outcomes here was revascularization.
And in an openlel trial, that's a little bit concerning because that's sort of one of the things that is most likely for people to be able to impact, right?
a doctor can make a decision whether a patient needs to be revascularized or not and perhaps that is related to bias in the trial versus death which is really not something that the investigators or the people on the care team could impact. So if you look at death from cardiovascular causes we don't really see a significant difference here uh one versus 1.2% and that is not statistically significant. I will point out that in a three-year study, death from cardiovascular causes is going to be sort of the least likely thing to happen. And so, I'm not surprised that we don't see a huge difference just in cardiovascular mortality at a three-year in a three-year time frame. But if we kept following these patients out longer and longer, eventually I would potentially expect to see this be a significant finding if we gave it enough time. Terms of non-fatal myioardial inffection, this is significant. We see that it happens in 08% of the intensive group versus 1.7% in the conventional group. And looking at our hazard ratio here, that's uh 0.46 with a confidence interval of 0.23 to 0.91.
Non-fatal stroke was not significantly different. Any revascularization, this was much different. Again, 4.8% in the intensive lowering group, 7.5% in the conventional group. Uh again about a 40% reduction here and driven of course mostly by coronary interventions.
But if you take the composite and you take revascularization out of it, do you still see a significant effect? So now we're just looking at death, heart attack, stroke. And if you do that, yes.
In fact, we still we still see a significant impact. So 2.3% in the intensive group versus 3.6% 6% that's a difference of 1.3% and that remains statistically significant with about a 40% reduction.
So we do see even without revascularization that this is statistically significant even in just a three-year time frame.
Let's see what they say about safety here. The incidence of new onset diabetes, worsening of glycemic control, statin associated muscle symptoms leading to changes in therapy dose or regimen, cancer diagnosis, cataract surgery, elevation of uh liver function tests or creatine kynise levels did not differ substantially between the two trial groups. However, incidence of elevated creatinine was lower. So higher creatinine is worse. You would prefer it to be lower. Um so this was actually a positive benefit in the intensive targeting group versus conventional targeting group. Okay that is the summary of their results. Let's think about well let's see what they say in their discussion.
Trial showed significantly lower three-year risk of the composite of death non-fatal myioardia infraction natal stroke revascularization or hospitalization. No substantial between group differences in the incidence of safety endpoints were observed.
All right. And here's a forest plot.
Right. So here is what I mentioned earlier in terms of the breakdown by gender. Um, when you're looking at these forest plots, you want the little tie fighter or the little box to be left of the dotted line. That dotted line is a hazard ratio of one. And what that means is that the results are basically null.
They are not any different than the uh conventional group. So in the male group you see that the intensive targeting was uh 6.5% had the composite event versus 10.8% 8% in the conventional group and this is squarely below the one line meaning that was a statistically significant effect and you see that here with the confidence interval of 045 to 79 in the female group you see that there was a 7% event rate in the intensive targeting group versus 5.7% in the conventional targeting group that's actually even a little higher than one and a very wide confidence interval that includes is the null or includes one. You can argue that this means women did not benefit from intensive lowering therapies. You could also argue that women are not powered in this trial to detect the difference because they only represent about 20% of the study population. We also know the average age in the trial was 65. Women don't really start to catch up to men in terms of cardiovascular risk of events until about 70. So again, that's the the loss of protection from estrogen through the menopausal transition and eventually in women especially who are not replaced that signal starts really showing up late 60s early 70s. So it's possible that we just don't have an old enough population of women to see the equivalent risk. But we have to acknowledge that one possibility, one possible explanation is that women do not achieve as much benefit from intensive lipid lowering as men. That is something that I don't think we can say one way or the other from these data, but we we must acknowledge. Um they break this down by BMI. Less than 25 seemed to show a little more benefit than greater than 25. Again, I would argue that these are both in the same direction. We just have uh less confidence across this particular finding here.
And patients with diabetes seem to have a little bit more benefit from the intensive lipid lowering than patients who did not have a diagnosis of diabetes. So, uh 6.5% versus 12.1%.
Um which again given that we know statins do worsen glycemic control this has always been a question you know is it appropriate for us to be using this when we know metabolic status is really important in risk for cardiovascular events I would say this particular situation would argue for yes intensive lipid lowering therapy does provide benefit even if you're incurring some worsening of metabolic status or glycemic status which we don't test for in this particular study but is certainly a possibility and something we have seen in other investigations.
Patients with chronic kidney disease were a little less likely to benefit.
That's an interesting finding. And um some signal for patients who had a lower baseline LDL cholesterol receiving more benefit. Whether that's because those patients were able to get even better control or not unclear to me. So these are some subgroup analyses that provide interesting hypothesis generation for future studies. But I would say nothing in this secondary analysis should be taken uh as proof positive of of a subgroup event rate by itself.
All right, here are the data for their safety analysis. Again, we mentioned that there really wasn't much significant difference except that patients uh were less likely to have creatine elevation in the intensive group versus the conventional group.
Okay. So the discussion continues here and they are reminding us that the European guidelines have introduced this target of less than 55 milligrams per deciliter for patients with ASCBD and that recommendation has been supported by an expert consensus by the American College of Cardiology for patients at quote unquote very high risk for cardiovascular events. But most trials still haven't shown that. So most of these previous trials have evaluated primarily the effects of these therapies themselves rather than the strategies defined by the specific targets. So again, are we testing the drug or are we testing the targets? This paper is interesting because we're actually just testing the target, not how we got there. Meaning whether it was high-intensity statin, whether it was moderate intensity statin plus a zettoide, whether it was moderate intensity statin plus PCSK9 inhibitors, we actually don't care. We're just looking at the LDL target.
All right. TST trial.
Evidence from randomized trials comparing an LDL cholesterol target of less than 55 milligs per diliter with a target of less than 70 milligs per deciliter in patients with ASCBD has been limited. The present trial addresses this gap in evidence and the results suggest that intensive targeting confers greater cardiovascular benefit for secondary prevention. Again, we are not talking about primary prevention here. These are only patients with known disease.
They're going to talk about the approach to achieving the target warrants strategic consideration.
In the present trial, the most potent statins were used. 50% of the patients were assigned to receive a zetto and PCSK9 inhibitors were permitted.
At three years, 60% of the patients in the intensive targeting group had an LDL cholesterol of less than 55 milligrams per deciliter and 85% had a level of less than 70.
48% of the patients in the intensive targeting group were receiving highintensity statins at 3 years. 66% were receiving a zetto and 2.3% were receiving PCSK9 inhibitors. These percentages were substantially higher than those in the conventional targeting group.
And these findings may help explain the cardiovascular benefit of intensive targeting of LDL cholesterol.
I think I'm going to leave the rest of that discussion for you to read if you wish. Um we can also talk about it in the comments if you have additional questions about it.
So let's think about the big picture here. This is a very specific population. So it's a group of South Korean patients. So, does that apply to patients here in the United States or Canada or the UK, wherever you may be watching from? Um, no offense to any South Koreans. I think my South Korean audience is pretty limited. But, uh, in any case, it's a specific population.
So, may maybe it doesn't generalize to wherever you may be watching from, and it may or may not generalize to the patients that I treat every day in my clinic here in sunny Southern California. We have the issue of women may not have as much benefit as men. We also wonder about which drugs were doing the thing. Now again the strength of the trial is that they actually didn't care and most of this was achieved with statin therapy and aetami. Very few people on PCSK9 inhibitors. So that means if those PCSK9 drugs are not accessible to you for any particular reason, you can still gain a lot of benefit through the use of statins and a zettobe and perhaps if you are not doing well on highintensity statin therapy, you could be on moderate intensity statin therapy, add a zettobe and actually get to that target. Let me know what other questions you have about this study in the comments below. It's going to generate a lot of controversy here on the channel. I know it will, but let me know. Let's have it. Until next time, guys. Take really good care.
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