Abstract Background Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (ASCVD) continues to be a major global health burden, with substantial residual cardiovascular risk remaining. Growing evidence highlights the liver’s pivotal role in the onset and development of ASCVD through multiple interconnected pathways. Main body As the metabolic center of the body, the liver regulates the synthesis, secretion, and clearance of several atherogenic lipoproteins while simultaneously serving as a systemic inflammation amplifier, producing cytokines, acute-phase proteins, and coagulation factors. Traditional liver-targeted therapies, such as statins, have demonstrated that regulating liver metabolism can confer significant cardiovascular benefits. Subsequently, advances in nucleic acid-based drugs and in vivo gene-editing tools have broadened this strategy, enabling accurate and durable modulation of hepatic gene expression. However, recent clinical trials suggest that improvements in laboratory biomarkers do not always translate into proportional reductions in major adverse cardiovascular events. Moreover, the long-term safety and durability of lipid nanoparticles and gene-editing platforms remain ongoing concerns. Future research should focus on the classification of patients based on multiple omics data, and distinguish those whose main problem is metabolic disorder from those who are mainly at high risk of inflammation, thereby facilitating personalized therapeutic targeting. Conclusion Overall, current evidence indicates that the liver represents a convergent therapeutic target for modulating both lipid metabolism and inflammation, offering a promising opportunity for deeper and more durable cardiovascular risk reduction.
Xiao et al. (Thu,) studied this question.