| Literature DB >> 35453579 |
Harold Superko1, Brenda Garrett1.
Abstract
Residual cardiovascular disease event risk, following statin use and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) reduction, remains an important and common medical conundrum. Identifying patients with significant residual risk, despite statin drug use, is an unmet clinical need. One pathophysiologic disorder that contributes to residual risk is abnormal distribution in lipoprotein size and density, which is referred to as lipoprotein heterogeneity. Differences in low density lipoprotein (LDL) composition and size have been linked to coronary heart disease (CHD) risk and arteriographic disease progression. The clinical relevance has been investigated in numerous trials since the 1950s. Despite this long history, controversy remains regarding the clinical utility of LDL heterogeneity measurement. Recent clinical trial evidence reinforces the relevance of LDL heterogeneity measurement and the impact on CHD risk prediction and outcomes. The determination of LDL subclass distribution improves CHD risk prediction and guides appropriate treatment.Entities:
Keywords: cardiovascular disease; cholesterol; coronary artery disease; lipoprotein heterogeneity; low density lipoprotein; residual risk; sdLDL; small LDL
Year: 2022 PMID: 35453579 PMCID: PMC9025822 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10040829
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Figure 1Percent of subjects experiencing a cardiovascular event in eight large statin investigations Scandinavian Simvastatin Survival Study (SSSS), Pravastatin or Atorvastatin Evaluation and Infection Therapy–Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction 22 (PROVE-IT 22), Heart Protection Study (HPS), Long-Term Intervention with Pravastatin in Ischaemic Disease (LIPID), Cholesterol and Recurrent Events (CARE), Treating to New Targets (TNT), Air Force/Texas Coronary Atherosclerosis Prevention Study (AFTEXCAPS), West of Scotland Coronary Prevention Study (WOSCOPS). Average relative risk reduction was 25% and the absolute risk reduction was 3.4% illustrating the large number of subjects experiencing a cardiovascular (CV) event while on statin therapy with reduced LDL-C values. (Modified from reference [1]).
Figure 2Scatter-plot of fasting triglycerides and LDL peak particle diameter in angstroms (r = 0.62, p < 0.0001) in 5366 CHD patients seen at the Fuqua Heart Center in Atlanta, Georgia. Large LDL particles have a diameter ≥ 263 angstroms and small LDL particles a diameter ≤ 257 angstroms.
Relevant clinical investigations that have contributed to understanding the role of small, dense LDL in cardiovascular risk ranked by date of publication.
| Study | Year | Findings |
|---|---|---|
| Framingham [ | 1966 | Trig rich Sf20-400 lipoproteins associated with CAD risk |
| Lawrence Livermore [ | 1966 | Trig rich Sf20-100 lipoproteins associated with CAD risk |
| NHLBI-II [ | 1987 | IDL linked to arteriographic progression of CAD |
| Boston Area Heart [ | 1988 | LDL pattern B associated with 3-fold increased CAD risk |
| STARS [ | 1992 | Dense (small) LDL best predictor of arteriographic outcome |
| Physician’s Health survey [ | 1996 | LDL pattern B associated with 3.4-fold increased CAD risk independent of total and HDL cholesterol and apo B |
| Stanford 5 City Project [ | 1996 | LDL size best predictor of CAD risk by conditional logistic regression |
| MARS [ | 1996 | In statin treated subjects with LDL-C < 85 mg/dL, triglyceride-rich lipoproteins were correlated with disease progression |
| SCRIP [ | 1996 | Dense LDL predicts arteriographic benefit in the Stanford Coronary Risk Intervention project. |
| Quebec CV Study [ | 1997 | Small LDL related to CHD risk. |
| Statistical adjustment for LDL-C, triglycerides, HDL-C, and apoB had virtually no impact on the relationship of small LDL and CHD risk. | ||
| CARE [ | 2001 | Large LDL size was an independent predictor of CHD events. Identifying patients on the basis of LDL size may not be useful clinically since pravastatin effectively treats risk associated with large LDL. |
| Healthy Women Study [ | 2002 | Small low-density lipoprotein (LDL) was positively associated with coronary artery calcium ( |
| SCRIP [ | 2003 | Small low-density lipoprotein III but not low-density lipoprotein cholesterol is related to arteriographic progression |
| EAST [ | 2003 | Arteriographic CAD progression over three years was significantly and independently linked to small, dense LDL particles. |
| Healthy Women Study [ | 2009 | CVD risk prediction associated with lipoprotein profiles evaluated by NMR was comparable but not superior to that of standard lipids or apolipoproteins |
| HATS [ | 2014 | Four laboratory methodologies confirm the association of small, dense LDL with greater coronary atherosclerosis progression and the associations were independent of standard lipid measurements. |
| ARIC [ | 2014 | sdLDL-C was associated with future CHD events even in individuals considered at low CVD risk based on their LDL-C level. |
| MESA [ | 2014 | sdLDL-C significantly associated with CHD risk even in subjects with LDL-C < 100 mg/dL who were normoglycemic |
| JUPITERr [ | 2015 | Baseline LDL-C was not associated with CVD events, in contrast with significant associations for non-HDL-C and atherogenic particles including select subfractions of LDL particles. |
| AIM-HIGH [ | 2016 | Levels of HDL3-C, but not HDL-C, HDL2-C, sdLDL, or LDL-TG, predict CV events in patients with metabolic dyslipidemia. |
| Malmo Heart [ | 2017 | Smaller LDL particles are associated with incident CVD independently of traditional risk-factors, including standard lipids |
| Sakai [ | 2018 | sdLDL-C was the most effective predictor of residual risk of future CHD events in stable older male CAD patients using statins and was independent of LDL-C |
| Copenhagen Heart Study [ | 2020 | Individuals with high sdLDL-C had higher MI and ASCVD risk in 38,322 subjects. |
STARS = Saint Thomas Arteriographic Regression Trial; HATS = HDL Atherosclerosis Treatment Study; ARIC = Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities; MESA = Multi Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis; JUPITER = Justification for the Use of Statins in Prevention: An Intervention Trial Evaluating Rosuvastatin; EAST = Emory Angioplasty and Surgery Trial; SCRIP = Stanford Coronary Risk Intervention Project; AIM-HIGH = Atherothrombosis Intervention in Metabolic Syndrome with Low HDL/High Triglycerides and Impact on Global Health Outcomes (AIM-HIGH) trial.
Figure 3Small dense LDL-C (sd-LDL-C) quartiles and large buoyant LDL-C (lb-LDL-C) quartiles and cardiovascular risk over 15 years of follow-up in ARIC. (Modified from reference [25]).