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Familial Hypercholesterolemia (FH)

Familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) is an inherited genetic disorder that causes dangerously high LDL cholesterol from birth — regardless of diet or exercise. Left untreated, it leads to heart attacks in men as young as 40 and women in their 50s. New PCSK9 inhibitor biologics dramatically lower LDL when statins aren't enough.

📊 FH affects approximately 1.3 million Americans — about 1 in 250 people — yet 90% are undiagnosed. A family history of early heart disease is the biggest red flag. Early diagnosis and treatment are life-saving.
familial hypercholesterolemia FH genetic high cholesterol PCSK9 inhibitor Praluent Repatha
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👥 ~1.3 million in US (90% undiagnosed) · Patients in US
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🏥 Cardiology · Specialty
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💊 3 available · FDA-approved drugs

FDA-Approved Treatments

Current approved therapies — what they are, who makes them, and what to ask your doctor.

Repatha
evolocumab · Amgen
PCSK9 Inhibitor (biologic)

FDA-approved for heterozygous and homozygous FH (2015), plus established cardiovascular disease. Reduces LDL by 60% on top of maximum statin therapy. FOURIER trial showed 15% reduction in cardiovascular events. Amgen's Repatha NOW program and co-pay cards widely available.

💰 ~$7,500/year (after rebates) — list ~$14,000+/year Subcutaneous injection (monthly or every 2 weeks) ✓ Patient Assist
Praluent
alirocumab · Regeneron / Sanofi
PCSK9 Inhibitor (biologic)

FDA-approved for heterozygous FH and high cardiovascular risk (2015). Reduces LDL by 45-60% on top of statins. ODYSSEY OUTCOMES trial showed 15% reduction in major adverse cardiovascular events.

💰 ~$7,500/year (after rebates) — list ~$14,000+/year Subcutaneous injection (every 2 weeks or monthly) ✓ Patient Assist
Leqvio
inclisiran · Novartis
siRNA Therapy (RNA interference)

FDA-approved for heterozygous FH and atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (2021). First-in-class siRNA that reduces LDL synthesis in the liver. Twice-yearly injections dramatically improve adherence vs monthly biologics. Reduces LDL by 50% on top of statins.

💰 ~$6,500/year after first year Subcutaneous injection — twice yearly ✓ Patient Assist

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📋 Newly Diagnosed Guide

Diagnosed with familial hypercholesterolemia? Here's what matters most.

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1. Get genetic testing — and test your family

Confirm your diagnosis with genetic testing (LDL receptor, APOB, PCSK9 genes). If you test positive, all first-degree relatives — parents, siblings, children — should be tested through cascade screening. FH is a family disease. Identifying it early in relatives is the single most impactful thing you can do.

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2. See a lipid specialist, not just your primary care doctor

FH management requires LDL targets far below normal recommendations — often below 70 mg/dL or even 55 mg/dL if you already have heart disease. A lipid specialist or preventive cardiologist will know the current evidence on aggressive LDL lowering in FH, when to add PCSK9 inhibitors, and how to navigate insurance prior authorization for newer therapies.

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3. Understand that statins alone may not be enough

Statins are the foundation of FH treatment and can reduce LDL 40-60%. But heterozygous FH patients often need LDL below 100 mg/dL (or below 70 mg/dL with cardiac risk factors), and statins alone may not get you there. Ask your doctor about adding ezetimibe and, if needed, a PCSK9 inhibitor (Repatha, Praluent) or the twice-yearly siRNA therapy Leqvio.

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4. Get a cardiac risk assessment — even if you feel fine

FH patients should have a baseline coronary artery calcium (CAC) score CT scan or carotid intima-media thickness ultrasound. These detect subclinical atherosclerosis and help determine how aggressively to treat. A young FH patient with zero calcium score has more time; one with elevated calcium needs urgent LDL lowering.

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5. PCSK9 inhibitors are expensive — but patient assistance is real

Repatha and Praluent list at $14,000+/year but Amgen's co-pay program (Repatha NOW) and Regeneron/Sanofi's co-pay card typically bring costs to under $5/month for commercially insured patients. For uninsured patients, both manufacturers have free drug programs. Leqvio has Novartis's QardioHeart support. Don't let sticker price be a barrier.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Real questions from patients and caregivers — answered in plain English.