Abstract

Abstract Background/Introduction Near-infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) allows to quantify lipid composition of coronary artery lesions. High plaque lipid content has been associated with increased adverse cardiovascular event risk. Purpose Aim of this study was to evaluate atherosclerotic plaque lipid content reduction in association with low-density lipoprotein (LDL-C) lowering on the background of intensive hypolipidaemic therapy. Methods NIRS investigation was performed in stable coronary artery disease patients having 20-50% stenosis in the proximal or middle third of a coronary artery. Segment of interest was repeatedly evaluated after 15 months. Lipid-rich plaques (LRPs) were defined as lesions with maximum lipid-core burden index within 4 mm (maxLCBI4 mm) >250. Study participants were taking high-intensity statin (atorvastatin 40 or 80 mg and rosuvastatin 20 or 40 mg) with or without ezetimibe for a run-in period of 4-6 weeks. Afterwards, in patients not achieving LDL-C level <1.8 mmol/l, add-on inclisiran was started. Baseline LDL-C was defined as the level at the time of initiation of optimal lipid-lowering therapy. Statistical significance level of 0.05 was set. Results Data of 36 patients was analyzed. Mean baseline maxLCBI4 mm was 203.9, reduced by 39.8% (-81.1, 95%CI -129.2 to -33.0) at 15-month follow-up (P=0.003). In 15 patients LRPs were detected with mean baseline maxLCBI4 mm 363.5, which was decreased by 35.8% (-130.3, 95%CI -235.0 to -25.7) (P=0.020). Mean LDL-C level at baseline was 2.5 mmol/l among all participants, lowered by 32.0% (-0.8, 95%CI -1.1 to -0.5) after 15 months of treatment (P<0.001). 19 patients received inclisiran in addition to high-dose statin and optional ezetimibe therapy. In 24 patients achieving LDL-C target <1.8 mmol/l at 15-month follow-up, a significant maxLCBI4 mm reduction from 208.5 by 48.4% (-101.0, 95%CI -169.3 to -32.7) was established (P=0.010). Among those having LDL-C >1.8 mmol/l, maxLCBI4 mm reduction from 194.7 by 21.2% (-41.25, 95%CI -94.7 to 12.2) was observed, however the change was not statistically significant (P=0.114). Conclusion LDL-C lowering with high-intensity hypolipidaemic therapy, including escalation to proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin type 9 (PCSK9) inhibition, demonstrated atherosclerotic plaque stabilization by NIRS-detected lipid content decrease.

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