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Recommendations for the use of LDL apheresis.

Thompson GR; HEART-UK LDL Apheresis Working Group. Reference: Atherosclerosis. 198:247-255. (Jun 2008). PMID: 18371971 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

Abstract

Plasma exchange has been shown to increase life-expectancy in homozygous familial hypercholesterolaemia (FH) but increasingly is being replaced by LDL apheresis. Several methods are now available for undertaking this procedure, which lowers LDL cholesterol and Lp(a) efficiently and safely when performed weekly or bi-weekly and causes only slight decreases in HDL cholesterol. Hitherto the main clinical indication has been homozygous FH, including children and pregnant women, but there are limited data showing that LDL apheresis has effects on the progression of cardiovascular disease in FH heterozygotes which are similar to those of maximal lipid-lowering drug therapy. Hence it has the potential to be beneficial in hypercholesterolaemic patients with overt coronary disease who are refractory to or intolerant of drugs.

It is therefore recommended that LDL apheresis should be the treatment of choice for: (1) all FH homozygotes from the age of seven onwards unless their serum cholesterol can be reduced by >50% and/or decreased to 5.0mmol/l or is decreased by <40% with maximal drug therapy. Apheresis may also occasionally be indicated on a case-by-case basis for patients with lower levels of LDL. (3) LDL apheresis should also be considered for patients with aggressive progressing coronary disease and Lp(a)>60mg/l whose LDL cholesterol remains >3.2mmol/l despite maximal drug therapy.

Acknowledgement to HEART UK

The working group was set up by the Medical Scientific & Research Committee of the Hyperlipidaemia Education And Research Trust (HEART-UK) – one of the societies involved in the Joint British Societies guideline group.
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