| Literature DB >> 28427464 |
Renato Quispe1, Aditya Hendrani2, Mohamed B Elshazly3, Erin D Michos4,5, John W McEvoy4,5, Michael J Blaha4, Maciej Banach6, Krishnaji R Kulkarni7, Peter P Toth4,8,9, Josef Coresh5, Roger S Blumenthal4, Steven R Jones4, Seth S Martin4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As the approach to low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) lowering becomes increasingly intensive, accurate assessment of LDL-C at very low levels warrants closer attention in individualized clinical efficacy and safety evaluation. We aimed to assess the accuracy of LDL-C estimation at very low levels by the Friedewald equation, the de facto clinical standard, and compare its accuracy with a novel, big data-derived LDL-C estimate.Entities:
Keywords: Accuracy; Clinical decision making; Friedewald estimation; Low-density lipoprotein cholesterol; Novel method; Very low
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28427464 PMCID: PMC5399386 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-017-0852-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Distribution of individuals with very low LDL-C levels across LDL-C and TG categories
| TG (mg/dL) | Friedewald-estimated LDL-C (mg/dL) | |||||
| < 15 | 15 to < 25 | 25 to < 40 | 40 to < 50 | 50 to < 70 | Total | |
| < 150 | 82 (9.9) | 716 (33.0) | 7591 (52.9) | 18,986 (64.6) | 103,096 (71.3) | 130,471 (68.2) |
| 150–199 | 73 (8.8) | 325 (15.0) | 2370 (16.5) | 4504 (15.3) | 20,485 (14.2) | 27,757 (14.5) |
| 200–399 | 672 (81.3) | 1126 (52.0) | 4385 (30.6) | 5918 (20.1) | 21,004 (14.5) | 33,105 (17.3) |
| Total | 827 (0.4) | 2167 (1.1) | 14,346 (7.5) | 29,408 (15.4) | 144,585 (75.6) | 191,333 |
| TG (mg/dL) | Novel method-estimated LDL-C (mg/dL) | |||||
| < 15 | 15 to < 25 | 25 to < 40 | 40 to < 50 | 50 to < 70 | Total | |
| < 150 | 90 (76.3) | 638 (81.3) | 7067 (83.3) | 17,708 (82.9) | 98,868 (80.3) | 124,371 (80.8) |
| 150–199 | 8 (6.8) | 71 (9.0) | 788 (9.3) | 2146 (10.1) | 13,157 (10.7) | 16,170 (10.5) |
| 200–399 | 20 (16.9) | 76 (9.7) | 630 (7.4) | 1506 (7.0) | 11,144 (9.0) | 11,144 (98.7) |
| Total | 118 (0.1) | 785 (0.5) | 8485 (5.5) | 21,360 (13.9) | 123,169 (80.0) | 153,917 |
| TG (mg/dL) | Directly-measured LDL-C (mg/dL) | |||||
| < 15 | 15 to < 25 | 25 to < 40 | 40 to < 50 | 50 to < 70 | Total | |
| < 150 | 64 (94.1) | 500 (85.8) | 6328 (82.4) | 16,744 (81.0) | 100,149 (79.7) | 123,785 (80.0) |
| 150–199 | 1 (1.5) | 42 (7.2) | 704 (9.2) | 2121 (10.3) | 14,347 (11.4) | 17,215 (11.1) |
| 200–399 | 3 (4.4) | 41 (7.0) | 648 (8.4) | 1803 (8.7) | 11,230 (8.9) | 13,725 (8.9) |
| Total | 68 (< 0.1) | 583 (0.4) | 7680 (5.0) | 20,668 (13.3) | 125,726 (81.3) | 154,725 |
Numbers shown are n with column percentages in parentheses
Fig. 1Discordance between direct ultracentrifugation measured and Friedewald-estimated LDL-C. Levels of LDLd-C (vertical axis) and LDLf-C (horizontal axis) are presented on this logarithmically scaled color density plot, with increasing density from light blue to purple. Panel : Overall population; Panel : TG < 150 mg/dL; Panel : TG 150–199 mg/dL; Panel : TG 200–399 mg/dL. A line of unity is included as well as lines indicating LDL-C 70 mg/dL. LDLd-C: directly-measured LDL-C by ultracentrifugation; LDLf-C: Friedewald-estimated LDL-C
Fig. 2Discordance between direct ultracentrifugation measured and novel method-estimated LDL-C. Levels of LDLd-C (vertical axis) and LDLn-C (horizontal axis) are presented on this logarithmically scaled color density plot, with increasing density from light blue to purple. Panel : Overall population; Panel : TG < 150 mg/dL; Panel : TG 150–199 mg/dL; Panel : TG 200–399 mg/dL. A line of unity is included as well as lines indicating LDL-C 70 mg/dL. LDLd-C: directly-measured LDL-C by ultracentrifugation; LDLn-C: Novel method-estimated LDL-C
Difference of LDL-C estimates relative to direct ultracentrifugation by LDL-C and TG categories
| Overall population | TG < 150 mg/dL | TG 150–199 mg/dL | TG 200–399 mg/dL | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Estimated LDL-C (mg/dL) | LDLf-C | LDLn-C | LDLf-C | LDLn-C | LDLf-C | LDLn-C | LDLf-C | LDLn-C |
| < 15 | –29.0 –37.4 to –19.6 | –2.7 –4.9 to 0.0 | –3.8 –6.8 to 0.0 | –1.5 –3.2 to 0.4 | –15.0 –17.2 to –11.4 | –8.2 –9.6 to –5.8 | –32.5 –39.0 to –25.6 | –10.8 –15.3 to –6.9 |
| 15 to < 25 | –16.2 –26.8 to –5.8 | –1.8 –3.5 to –0.3 | –2.8 –6.0 to 0.4 | –1.5 –2.7 to 0.0 | –13.0 –15.4 to –10.6 | –4.6 –7.0 to –1.3 | –26.1 –33.2 to –20.4 | –6.7 –10.3 to –3.3 |
| 25 to < 40 | –7.0 –16.2 to –1.2 | –1.1 –2.5 to 0.3 | –1.6 –4.8 to 0.8 | –1.0 –2.2 to 0.3 | –11.0 –13.6 to –8.2 | –2.7 –4.9 to –0.3 | –21.8 –28.8 to –16.6 | –3.2 –7.0 to 0.4 |
| 40 to < 50 | –4.0 –10.6 to –0.2 | –0.7 –2.0 to 0.7 | –1.2 –4.0 to 1.2 | –0.7 –1.9 to 0.6 | –9.8 –12.4 to –7.2 | –1.1 –3.3 to 1.3 | –19.4 –25.4 to –14.6 | –1.4 –4.7 to 2.1 |
| 50 to < 70 | –2.4 –7.4 to 0.6 | –0.1 –1.5 to 1.3 | –0.6 –3.2 to 1.4 | –0.2 –1.4 to 1.1 | –8.6 –11 to –6.0 | 0.0 –2.1 to 2.6 | –17.0 –22.6 to –12.4 | –0.2 –3.8 to 3.6 |
| Total | –2.8 –8.6 to 0.4 | –0.3 –1.7 to 1.1 | –0.8 –3.4 to 1.4 | –0.3 –1.5 to 1.0 | –9.0 –11.6 to –6.2 | –0.3 –2.4 to 2.3 | –18.4 –24.6 to –13.6) | –0.5 –4.1 to 3.3 |
Differences reported as median above with 25th to 75th percentiles below, in mg/dL. Differences were calculated as: LDLf-C – LDLd-C, and LDLn-C – LDLd-C; thus, negative values indicate underestimation and vice versa. Numbers of individuals per LDL-C category are the same as in Table 1
Proportions of concordance between estimation methods and direct ultracentrifugation LDL-C
Numbers shown are n above with row percentages in parentheses below
White cells: concordance; Blue cells: discordantly high; Red cells: discordantly low