Abstract

Oral contraceptive (OC) use and common apo E polymorphism are well known to modify serum lipid and lipoprotein concentrations. The combined effect of OC use and apo E genotype on the concentration of apo E or apo C-III in apo B- (apo E-LpB or apo C-III-LpB) or in non-apo B-containing lipoparticles (apo E-Lp-non-B or apo C-III-Lp-non-B) are unknown. Our study comprised 613 women, aged 30–45 years, genotyped for common apo E polymorphism and who differed in their combined low-dose OC consumption. The concentrations of apo C-III, apo C-III-LpB and apo C-III-Lp-non-B were significantly higher in OC users than in non-users by 13, 23 and 8% respectively, without significant interaction with the apo E genotype. The concentrations of apo E and apo E-Lp-non-B were significantly lower (differences being −14% and −31% respectively) in OC users than in controls whereas the apo E-LpB concentration was significantly higher (+19%), resulting in a redistribution of apo E from Lp-non-B towards LpB. Total apo E and apo E-Lp-non-B concentrations were higher in subjects carrying the ε2 allele and lower in those with the ε4 allele when compared to ε3/ ε3 subjects ( P<0.001). The opposite held for the apo E- LpB concentration ( P<0.05). The main finding is the significant interaction between apo E genotype and OC use ( P<0.01) on apo E-Lp-non-B concentration, the ε4 carriers showing the smallest differences between OC users and non-users in comparison with the ε2 or ε3/ ε3 carriers. These results suggest that the common apo E polymorphism can modulate the OC use effect.

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