Abstract

Abstract Introduction Recently introduced lipid–lowering agents (PCSK9–i, bempedoic acid) can efficiently treat statin–intolerant patients, who couldn‘t reach LDL target before. Nonetheless, there are still cases where the pharmacological management may have strong limitations. Case Report A 71 year–old woman, with multiple cardiovascular risk factors (diabetes, hypertension and familial dylipidemia, LDL–C 276) underwent heart transplantation for a hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with an evolution towards a dilated phenotype in 2005. Before the transplant, she was on low–dose statin treatment (pravastatin 10 mg/die) that was suspended years later owing to hyper–CKemia (600 U/L), despite her being totally asymptomatic. A second attempt with simvastatin/ezetimibe 40/10 mg resulted again in elevation of CK levels, associated with significant muscular pain. Thus, just ezetimibe was continued. In 2020, 15 years after the transplant, the patient underwent a coronary angiography showing a moderate coronary allograft vasculopathy (ISHLT CAV2). Specifically, a sub occlusive ostial left main coronary artery lesion was treated by percutaneous angioplasty and stent implantation. Since a lower LDL target was needed (LDL–C 55 mg/dL), Alirocumab was introduced. However, 6 months later, no significant LDL levels reduction had been observed. The shift to evolocumab led to the same result, although the patient reported full therapeutic compliance. In the suspicion of anti–drug antibodies development, we opted for Inclisiran without achieving a significant decrease in LDL–C levels. In parallel with the search for genetic mutations in the PCSK9 gene and other genes involved in cholesterol metabolism (including LDLR, APOB, and LDLRAP1 and resulting positive only for common variants in LDLR receptor), therapy with bempedoic acid was initiated, again without substantial benefit (LDL–C 118 mg/dL). Conclusion Despite cholesterol management has been simplified by the introduction of new drugs, it may still be complex in patients requiring very low LDL–C levels in some specific cases. Drugs with a LDL receptor–independent mechanism of action (e.g., evinacumab) may allow the achievement of therapeutic goals suggested by clinical guidelines.

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