Abstract

Serum lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] concentrations in chronic renal failure patients were investigated in relation to the degree of renal insufficiency, treatment by maintenance hemodialysis, and correction of uremia by renal transplantation with or without cyclosporin immunosuppression. Fast serum levels of Lp(a) (mg/100 mL) were determined in 34 chronic renal failure patients not in need of maintenance dialysis (16 with serum creatinine 2.0–4.0 mg/100 mL; 18 with serum creatinine higher than 4.0 mg/100 mL), 40 patients treated by hemodialysis, 55 successful renal transplant recipients (28 under cyclosporin treatment and 27 receiving no cyclosporin), and 34 healthy controls. Age and sex distributions were similar among groups. Pregnant women; non-White individuals; subjects with obesity, diabetes, nephrotic syndrome, and hepatic and thyroid diseases; and those treated with oral contraceptives or lipid-lowering drugs were excluded from the study. Compared to controls, median Lp(a) was increased in nondialyzed renal failure patients (11 vs. 47.5 p < 0.001) and this was the only lipid abnormality observed in the group. There was no significant difference in Lp(a) levels between nondialized renal failure patients with serum creatinine 2.0–4.0 and >4.0 mg/100 mL (47 vs. 49, NS). Moreover, Pearson correlation coeficient (r = 0.01, NS) showed that Lp(a) values were not related to serum creatinine in nondialyzed patients. In hemodialysis subjects Lp(a) concentrations (median = 29) were intermediate between those observed in nondialyzed patients and controls but the differences were not significant. Lp(a) levels in renal transplant patients treated with cyclosporin (median = 6) and not receiving cyclosporin (median = 13) were similar and did not differ from controls. Serum Lp(a) increases and attains maximum levels with mild/moderate reduction in renal function, and does not seem to change through late renal failure stages or in relation to the introduction of maintenance hemodialysis treatment. Correction of uremia by successful renal transplant caused normalization of Lp(a) levels regardless of the use of cyclosporin. Increased Lp(a) levels may be the earliest and more consistent lipid alteration seen in predialysis renal failure.

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