Abstract

To compare the potential of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol and apolipoprotein (apo) A-I, the major protein in HDL particles, in predicting cardiovascular risk. Pros and cons for using these risk markers are discussed. Both HDL cholesterol and apoA-I are in most clinical conditions antiatherogenic - the higher the values, the lower the cardiovascular risk. Methodological and physiological factors speak in favour of using apoA-I rather than HDL cholesterol as a marker of risk. In prospective risk studies and in lipid-lowering trials it has been shown that the apoB/A-I ratio, which reflects the cholesterol balance between all potentially atherogenic (apoB) and antiatherogenic lipoproteins (apoA-I), is a better risk marker than low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, HDL cholesterol and lipid ratios in predicting cardiovascular risk and response to lipid lowering induced by statins. Practical advantages speak in favour of using apoB and apoA-I - fasting is not needed to analyze and interpret the values of apoB and apoA-I. New guidelines should be developed in which target values for apoB and apoA-I are defined to enable the use of these new strong risk markers/factors in clinical practice.

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