Abstract

ObjectiveWe aimed at identifying which lipid factors drive vascular risk in statin-treated patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). MethodsWe recorded vascular events over 5.6 years in 491 consecutive statin-treated patients with angiographically proven stable CAD, covering 2750 patient-years. ResultsIn the total population, low high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol (standardized adjusted HR 0.73 [0.60–0.89]; p=0.001), low apolipoprotein A1 (0.77 [0.65–0.92]; p=0.003), a small low-density lipoprotein (LDL) particle diameter (0.76 [0.64–0.91]; p=0.002), and high triglycerides (1.20 [1.05–1.38]; p=0.007) predicted vascular events, but not total cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, or apolipoprotein B. Factor analysis in the lipid profiles of our patients revealed an HDL-related factor and an LDL-related factor. Concordant with the results for individual lipid parameters, the HDL-related factor (0.69 [0.58–0.83]; p<0.001) but not the LDL-related factor (p=0.455) predicted vascular events. Patients with type 2 diabetes (T2DM; n=116) were at a higher vascular risk than non-diabetic subjects (38.6% vs. 24.1%; p<0.001), and like in the total population the HDL-related factor (0.59 [0.44–0.77]; p<0.001) but not the LDL-related factor (p=0.591) predicted vascular risk in diabetic patients. ConclusionsThe pattern of low HDL cholesterol, low apolipoprotein A1, small LDL particles, and high triglycerides drives vascular risk in statin-treated coronary patients, particularly in those with T2DM.

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