Abstract

This study investigated 12-year blood lipid trajectories and whether these trajectories are modified by smoking and lipid lowering treatment in older Russians. To do so, we analysed data on 9,218 Russian West-Siberian Caucasians aged 45-69 years at baseline participating in the international HAPIEE cohort study. Mixed-effect multilevel models were used to estimate individual level lipid trajectories across the baseline and two follow-up examinations (16,445 separate measurements over 12 years). In all age groups, we observed a reduction in serum total cholesterol (TC), LDL-C and non-HDL-C over time even after adjusting for sex, statin treatment, hypertension, diabetes, social factors and mortality (P<0.01). In contrast, serum triglyceride (TG) values increased over time in younger age groups, reached a plateau and decreased in older age groups (> 60 years at baseline). In smokers, TC, LDL-C, non-HDL-C and TG decreased less markedly than in non-smokers, while HDL-C decreased more rapidly while the LDL-C/HDL-C ratio increased. In subjects treated with lipid-lowering drugs, TC, LDL-C and non-HDL-C decreased more markedly and HDL-C less markedly than in untreated subjects while TG and LDL-C/HDL-C remained stable or increased in treatment naïve subjects. We conclude, that in this ageing population we observed marked changes in blood lipids over a 12 year follow up, with decreasing trajectories of TC, LDL-C and non-HDL-C and mixed trajectories of TG. The findings suggest that monitoring of age-related trajectories in blood lipids may improve prediction of CVD risk beyond single measurements.

Highlights

  • Plasma lipid values are important modifiable risk factors of cardiovascular diseases [1]

  • In order to distinguish between ageing and period/cohort effects, we separately modelled total cholesterol (TC), LDL-C, HDL-C, TG as well as computed non-HDL-C and LDL-C/HDL-C trajectories over the 12-year follow-up period by 5-year birth cohorts

  • Data on TC, LDL-C, HDL-C and TG were obtained from 9,218 participants at baseline, 3,442 subjects at wave 2 and 3,785 persons at wave 3, totalling 16,445 individuallevel examinations

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Summary

Objectives

The overall aim of our study was to track changes in blood lipid concentrations associated with age in a Russian West-Siberian Caucasian population. The secondary aim of the study was to determine whether and to what degree these changes would be influenced by smoking and lipid lowering treatment

Results
Discussion
Conclusion

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