2018
Cardiovascular event reduction with PCSK9 inhibition among 1578 patients with familial hypercholesterolemia: Results from the SPIRE randomized trials of bococizumab
Ridker PM, Rose LM, Kastelein JJP, Santos RD, Wei C, Revkin J, Yunis C, Tardif JC, Shear CL, Investigators S. Cardiovascular event reduction with PCSK9 inhibition among 1578 patients with familial hypercholesterolemia: Results from the SPIRE randomized trials of bococizumab. Journal Of Clinical Lipidology 2018, 12: 958-965. PMID: 29685591, DOI: 10.1016/j.jacl.2018.03.088.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdultAgedAntibodies, Anti-IdiotypicAntibodies, Monoclonal, HumanizedAnticholesteremic AgentsCardiovascular DiseasesCholesterol, LDLFemaleHumansHydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase InhibitorsHyperlipoproteinemia Type IIMaleMiddle AgedPlacebo EffectProportional Hazards ModelsProprotein Convertase 9Risk FactorsConceptsProprotein convertase subtilisin kexin type 9Major adverse cardiovascular eventsAdverse cardiovascular eventsPCSK9 inhibitionNon-FH patientsFH patientsCardiovascular eventsFamilial hypercholesterolemiaMean (SD) baseline LDL-C levelElevated low-density lipoprotein cholesterolFuture cardiovascular event ratesBaseline LDL-C levelsLow-density lipoprotein cholesterolSubtilisin kexin type 9Cardiovascular event reductionHard cardiovascular eventsHard cardiovascular outcomesPlacebo-controlled dataPrimary prevention patientsCardiovascular event ratesLDL-C reductionProportion of patientsClinical trial programLDL-C levelsIncidence rate ratios
2016
Evaluating bococizumab, a monoclonal antibody to PCSK9, on lipid levels and clinical events in broad patient groups with and without prior cardiovascular events: Rationale and design of the Studies of PCSK9 Inhibition and the Reduction of vascular Events (SPIRE) Lipid Lowering and SPIRE Cardiovascular Outcomes Trials
Ridker PM, Amarenco P, Brunell R, Glynn RJ, Jukema JW, Kastelein JJ, Koenig W, Nissen S, Revkin J, Santos RD, Schwartz PF, Yunis C, Tardif JC, Investigators S. Evaluating bococizumab, a monoclonal antibody to PCSK9, on lipid levels and clinical events in broad patient groups with and without prior cardiovascular events: Rationale and design of the Studies of PCSK9 Inhibition and the Reduction of vascular Events (SPIRE) Lipid Lowering and SPIRE Cardiovascular Outcomes Trials. American Heart Journal 2016, 178: 135-144. PMID: 27502861, DOI: 10.1016/j.ahj.2016.05.010.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAntibodies, Monoclonal, HumanizedAnticholesteremic AgentsCardiovascular DiseasesCholesterol, LDLDouble-Blind MethodDrug Therapy, CombinationHumansHydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase InhibitorsHypercholesterolemiaHyperlipoproteinemia Type IILipoproteins, LDLConceptsCardiovascular outcome trialsOutcome trialsCardiovascular eventsPatient groupAtherogenic lipidsCholesterol levelsHigh-risk primary preventionSubtilisin kexin type 9Hepatic low-density lipoprotein receptorMonoclonal antibodiesAtherogenic cholesterol levelsIncident vascular eventsResidual cholesterol riskSafety of bococizumabVascular event ratesHigh-risk patientsPrior cardiovascular eventsClinical cardiovascular eventsEvident cardiovascular diseaseLDL cholesterol levelsHigh-risk populationHumanized monoclonal antibodyLow-density lipoprotein receptorHigh residual riskBroad patient groups