Abstract

Abstract Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease is a result of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) particles becoming trapped in arterial walls and forming plaques which ultimately restrict blood-flow. LDL cholesterol (LDL-C) and apolipoprotein B (apoB) are highly correlated measures of plaque-causing LDL particles. Both have been shown to predict major adverse cardiac events (MACE). ApoB is also carried on remnant lipoproteins (RLP). RLP-cholesterol (RLP-C) is increasingly appreciated as a MACE risk-factor. This study aimed to define discordances between apoB and LDL-C in a large data set from a clinical reference laboratory. We then applied this definition to evaluate which measure predicted the risk of MACE in a patient cohort referred for coronary angiography with >10 years follow-up. LDL-C was measured by beta-quantification and RLP-C was defined as total cholesterol – LDL-C – HDL-C. Apo B discordance relative to LDL-C was determined by linear regression in a discovery cohort (n=17,203) using beta quantification. Discordance was defined by quartiles of the residual-apoB (expected–actual); discordant-low (<25th percentile), concordant (25th to 75th percentile) and discordant-high (>75th percentile). Associations with prevalence and incident of MACE were evaluated by odds-ratio and logistic regression. Risk of MACE was calculated based on the apoB-discordance and reported MACE events by several years follow up in a separate cohort (n=501). In the discovery cohort, age ranged from 18-95 years, 51% were female and mean (±SD) lipid values were: ApoB: 100.4 ± 30.0mg/dl, LDL-C: 121.7 ± 47.9mg/dl, and RLP-C: 17.2 ± 26.9mg/dl. Expected-apoB was described by the formula: (LDL-c X 0.6278 + 24.07, R=0.88). Residual-apoB (discordance) ranged from -1037 to 581.2 with a mean 0.01±18.6, and notably increased with triglyceride concentration (rho=0.65) and with RLP-C (rho=0.64), but was minimally influenced by apoB (rho=0.35) and LDL-C (rho=0.009) (p<0.001 all cases). In the clinical follow-up cohort, age ranged from 26-77 years, 42% were female, 64% were current/former smokers, and 28% were on lipid-lowering therapy. Mean (±SD) lipids were: apoB: 97.8 ± 20.9mg/dl, LDL-C: 124.6 ± 36.6mg/dl, and RLP-C: 34.9 ± 25.6mg/dl. Serum triglycerides among subjects discordant-low apoB, concordant and discordant-high apoB were 148mg/dL, 157mg/dL and 238mg/dL, respectively; similarly for RLP-C. A total of 192 events occurred during a mean of 9 years follow-up. Subjects with discordantly elevated apoB had a significantly higher incidence of MACE compared to those with concordant values (47% vs. 36%, p=0.03). There was no difference in MACE for subjects with discordantly low apoB (35% vs. 36%). These data support previous reports of an association between apoB and LDL-C and the superior performance of apoB when discordantly elevated. Our data expand on previous studies by applying an externally defined threshold for discordant-apoB. Our data indicate that triglycerides, RLP-C are associated with discordances and MACE.

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