US Healthcare Professionals
Not actual patients.
FCS is an extreme form of severe hypertriglyceridemia (sHTG) caused by genetic variants that impair lipoprotein lipase activity and triglyceride metabolism leading to extremely high triglycerides that are unresponsive to traditional triglyceride-lowering treatments like fibrates.1
FCS is characterized by very high plasma triglyceride concentrations—a key characteristic of which is milky-looking plasma, caused by a white chylomicron layer floating at the top of the sample1,2
Patients with FCS are at a significant risk for severe complications including acute pancreatitis, which can be fatal1,3,4
If your patients have fasting triglycerides ≥880 mg/dL, it could be a sign that they have FCS, which can be confirmed either genetically or through a clinical diagnosis. Consider a diagnosis using the checklist below.
and ONE of the following:
*In excess of 1000 mg/dL at least 3 times; refractory to lipid-lowering therapy.6
Acute pancreatitis is the most serious and potentially fatal complication of extremely high triglycerides.1,4
Acute pancreatitis caused by high triglycerides is often more severe and more deadly than acute pancreatitis caused by other factors7,8
Leading expert guidelines† establish triglyceride levels of <500 mg/dL as the goal to reduce risk9,10
Retrospective cohort study annualized incidence rate of acute pancreatitis. Data were obtained from IQVIA's US Ambulatory Electronic Medical Records database (N=7,119,195).9,10
29 years old | Female
Healthy, other than multiple episodes of severe abdominal pain without explainable cause, some leading to hospitalization
Does her best maintaining a strict diet and has lost hope after many medical interventions, including fibrates showing limited efficacy
Extremely high triglyceride levels (>1000 mg/dL) with no history of alcoholism, cholelithiasis, or kidney disease
Not an actual patient.
Not an actual patient.
47 years old | Male
Extremely high triglyceride levels (consistently >1500-2500 mg/dL) with no history of diabetes or obesity
Recurrent pancreatitis (3 episodes over past 5 years), fatigue, and difficulty concentrating
Has discontinued moderate alcohol use and does his best to maintain a low-fat diet
Family history of high cholesterol and abdominal pain, potentially consistent with pancreatitis
Not an actual patient.
†American Heart Association, American College of Cardiology, National Lipid Association, American Association of Clinical Endocrinology, and the American College of Endocrinology.10,11
AACE, American Association of Clinical Endocrinology; AP, acute pancreatitis; FCS, Familial Chylomicronemia Syndrome; HTG, hypertriglyceridemia
REDEMPLO® (plozasiran) is indicated as an adjunct to diet to reduce triglycerides in adults with familial chylomicronemia syndrome (FCS).
CONTRAINDICATIONS: None.
ADVERSE REACTIONS: Most common adverse reactions in REDEMPLO treated patients (incidence ≥10% of patients treated with REDEMPLO and > 5% more frequently than with placebo) are hyperglycemia, headache, nausea, and injection site reaction.