Abstract

Atherosclerotic CVD is the major cause of death in patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM). Alterations in the HDL proteome have been shown to associate with prevalent CVD in T1DM. We therefore sought to determine which proteins carried by HDL might predict incident CVD in patients with T1DM. Using targeted MS/MS, we quantified 50 proteins in HDL from 181 T1DM subjects enrolled in the prospective Coronary Artery Calcification in Type 1 Diabetes study. We used Cox proportional regression analysis and a case-cohort design to test associations of HDL proteins with incident CVD (myocardial infarction, coronary artery bypass grafting, angioplasty, or death from coronary heart disease). We found that only one HDL protein—SFTPB (pulmonary surfactant protein B)—predicted incident CVD in all the models tested. In a fully adjusted model that controlled for lipids and other risk factors, the hazard ratio was 2.17 per SD increase of SFTPB (95% confidence interval, 1.12–4.21, P = 0.022). In addition, plasma fractionation demonstrated that SFTPB is nearly entirely bound to HDL. Although previous studies have shown that high plasma levels of SFTPB associate with prevalent atherosclerosis only in smokers, we found that SFTPB predicted incident CVD in T1DM independently of smoking status and a wide range of confounding factors, including HDL-C, LDL-C, and triglyceride levels. Because SFTPB is almost entirely bound to plasma HDL, our observations support the proposal that SFTPB carried by HDL is a marker—and perhaps mediator—of CVD risk in patients with T1DM.

Highlights

  • Isotope-dilution parallel reaction monitoring (PRM) analysis of 50 HDL proteins demonstrated that alpha-1-microglobulin/bikunin precursor (AMBP), C4b binding protein alpha chain (C4BPA), cystatin C gene 3 (CST3), insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1), and surfactant protein B (SFTPB) differed in relative abundance between control subjects of a randomly selected cohort and subjects with incident CVD in Calcification in Type Diabetes (CACTI), a prospective study of complications in patients with type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM)

  • We assessed the associations between HDL proteins and incident CVD, using Cox proportional hazards models with a casecohort design

  • SFTPB was significantly associated with incident CVD in all the models we adjusted for potential confounders

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Summary

Introduction

To determine whether HDL proteins associated with incident CVD risk, we used a case-cohort design and Cox hazard analysis. We tested the hypothesis that the levels of one or more HDL proteins associate with incident CVD in subjects with T1DM. These analyses demonstrate that high levels of SFTPB strongly (HRs = 1.8–2.2) and consistently associated with incident CVD in T1DM subjects after adjustments for a wide range of potentially confounding factors.

Results
Conclusion

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