| Literature DB >> 30949068 |
Peipei Chen1, Xi Chen1, Shuyang Zhang1.
Abstract
Background: Familial hypercholesterolemia (FH) greatly facilitates the development of cardiovascular disease (CVD). Without timely treatment, the incidence of coronary heart disease (CHD) in patients with FH is 3 to 4 times that in non-FH patients, and the onset of CVD would be advanced by approximately 10 years. There is ample evidence that the diagnosis and adequate treatment of FH are not properly considered for all ethnicities. The monogenic cause of FH includes apolipoprotein B (APOB), low-density lipoprotein receptor (LDLR), and proprotein convertase subtilisin/kexin 9 (PCSK9). There are approximately 2,765,420 to 6,913,550 cases of potential heterozygous FH (HeFH) and 2,205 to 4,609 cases of potential homozygous FH (HoFH) in China. Nevertheless, China lacks clinical diagnostic criteria specific to Chinese patients, such that most FH patients cannot be diagnosed until middle age or after their first cardiovascular event, thus precluding early treatment. Objective: This article explores the gene mutations, diagnosis and treatment of FH patients in China. Following the implementation of the two-child policy, there is a need to establish Chinese FH registry systems and genetic databases and to address the challenges in conducting cascade screening and long-term management.Entities:
Keywords: FH registry system; cardiovascular disease; cascade screening; dyslipidemia; familial hypercholesterolemia
Year: 2019 PMID: 30949068 PMCID: PMC6435575 DOI: 10.3389/fphys.2019.00280
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Physiol ISSN: 1664-042X Impact factor: 4.566
FIGURE 1Global FH burden based on a 1:250 frequency and regional distribution of diagnosed FH patients. The source of data was a figure from a previous study (Nordestgaard and Benn, 2017). (A) There were global estimated 29,702,000 FH cases in 2017. (B) Regional distribution of shows that the total number of confirmed FH patients is 687,728, more than a quarter of them was in Asia.
FIGURE 2Number of FH Patients and Percentage of Diagnostic Methods (Nordestgaard and Benn, 2017). On LDL-C: the estimated proportion of all FH patients who were diagnosed solely based on LDL-C (probably accompanied by clinical signs of FH). On genes: the estimated proportion of all FH patients who were diagnosed on the basis of the combination of LDL-C, genetic screening of mutations in LDLR, APOB, or PCSK9 genes and possible clinical signs.
FIGURE 3Estimated prevalence of FH in China. Expected HeFH cases and HoFH cases.
Dutch lipid clinic network (DLCN) clinical criteria and modified DLCN definition for familial hypercholesterolemia.
| DLCN Criteria | Points | Modified DLCN for China | Points |
|---|---|---|---|
| First-degree relative with known premature (men: <55 years; women: <60 years) coronary artery disease or vascular disease, or first-degree relative with known LDL-C level above the 95th percentile by age, gender for country | First-degree relative with known premature (men: <55 years; women: <60 years) coronary artery disease or vascular disease. | ||
| First-degree relative with tendinous xanthomata and/or arcus cornealis, or children aged less than 18 years with LDL-C level above the 95th percentile by age, gender for country | |||
| Patient with premature (men: <55 years; women: <60 years) coronary artery disease | Patient with premature (men: <55 years; women: <60 years) coronary artery disease | ||
| Patient with premature (men: <55 years; women: <60 years) cerebrovascular or peripheral vascular disease | Patient with premature (men: <55 years; women: <60 years) cerebrovascular or peripheral vascular disease | ||
| Tendinous xanthomata | |||
| Arcus cornealis prior to age 45 years | |||
| LDL-C ≥ 8.5 mmol/l (∼330 mg/dl) | LDL-C ≥ 6 mmol/l (∼230 mg/dl) | ||
| LDL-C 6.5–8.4 mmol/l (∼250–329 mg/dl) | LDL-C 5.0–5.9 mmol/l (∼190–29 mg/dl) | ||
| LDL-C 5.0–6.4 mmol/l (∼190–249 mg/dl) | LDL-C 3.5–4.9 mmol/l (∼135–189 mg/dl) | ||
| LDL-C 4.0–4.9 mmol/l (∼155–189 mg/dl) | LDL-C 2.5–3.4 mmol/l (∼97–134 mg/dl) | ||
| Causative mutation in the LDLR, ApoB or PCSK9 gene | |||
FIGURE 4Influence of FH, clinical signs and genetic diagnosis on the risk of CAD. Reprinted with permission from a previous study (Tada et al., 2017). The calculation of odds ratios was performed by logistic regression after adjusting for age, sex, diabetes, hypertension, smoking, and the LDL-C level. FH represents familial hypercholesterolemia; CAD represents coronary artery disease; and CI represents confidence interval (We received copyright permission from Oxford to reproduce the figure).
FIGURE 5Process flow from case identification to entry in the registry system.