Abstract
IntroductionThe most commonly utilized method for determining low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDLc) is by Friedewald estimation (FeLDLc). A new approach to better estimate LDLc has been proposed by Sampson et al. 2020, known as the Sampson/National Institutes of Health (NIH) estimation of LDLc (NeLDLc), to overcome the limitations of FeLDLc. Non-high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (Non-HDLc), has equivalent cut-offs to LDLc, established by the 2021 Canadian Cardiovascular Society (CCS) guideline. We hypothesized that NeLDLc remains an inadequate substitute at high triglyceride levels when compared to Non-HDLc. MethodsA retrospective analysis of 120,959 lipid profiles (47085 patients) spanning five years across a large academic medical center was utilized for comparison of NeLDLc and FeLDLc relative to Non-HDLc as a function of triglyceride content. Regression and concordance between calculated methods were determined at various triglyceride levels to determine optimal utilization of NeLDLc. ResultsNeLDLc is generally more correlated and has greater concordance than FeLDLc with Non-HDLc. NeLDLc with increasing triglycerides can produce negatively erroneous results, even with triglycerides < 4.52 mmol/L (400 mg/dL). The largest variation of NeLDLc results is notable at < 0.5 mmol/L (19 mg/dL). Currently, the 2021 CCS guideline recommends reliance on Non-HDLc when triglycerides are > 1.5 mmol/L (133 mg/dL). With the use of NeLDLc, this triglyceride cut-off can be increased to 1.7 mmol/L(150 mg/dL), making it consistent with the hypertriglyceridemia flagging limit. ConclusionNeLDLc offers increased concordance and correlation to Non-HDLc when compared to FeLDLc. However, caution is warranted when triglycerides are > 4.5 mmol/L and when NeLDLc results are < 0.5 mmol/L. Adopting NeLDLc enables flagging at 1.7 mmol/L (vs. 1.5 mmol/L) of triglycerides to suggest reliance on Non-HDLc while simultaneoulsly indicating hypertriglyceridemia.
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