Angiographic and Pathological Studies on Regression of Coronary Atherosclerosis of FH Patients Who Received LDL‐Apheresis Treatment

Abstract
We report on the most recent data confirming the angiographic and pathological efficacy of LDL-apheresis for coronary atherosclerosis of a familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) patient using collected data of a large number of cases and especially of one autopsy case. Changes in coronary artery stenosis have been assessed angiographically in 37 FH patients in the LDL-Apheresis Regression Study (LARS) group of 13 institutions in Japan. Definite regression was observed in 21 segments by visual and computer analysis. Fourteen of 37 patients (37.8%) who had received LDL-apheresis treatment in combination with cholesterol-lowering drugs had at least one regressed segment without any progressed segment. We pathologically examined at autopsy the coronary arteries in one FH patient who had received long-term LDL-apheresis therapy before death. The results revealed the process of scarring of atheromatous plaque, suggesting pathological regression correlated with the angiographic regression shown in serial angiograms taken during LDL-apheresis treatment. It was further suggested that the formation of an eccentric thickened wall lesion rich in collagen fiber prevented atheromatous plaque from tearing off. Such tearing off might lead to an acute coronary event. Aggressive cholesterol-lowering therapy based on LDL-apheresis can induce both angiographic and pathological regression in coronary atherosclerosis of FH patients.