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Serum apolipoproteins and apolipoprotein-defined lipoprotein subclasses: a hypothesis-generating prospective study of cardiovascular events in T1D.

Citation
Basu, A., et al. “Serum Apolipoproteins And Apolipoprotein-Defined Lipoprotein Subclasses: A Hypothesis-Generating Prospective Study Of Cardiovascular Events In T1D.”. Journal Of Lipid Research, pp. 1432-1439.
Center University of Alabama at Birmingham University of Washington
Multicenter
Multicenter
Author Arpita Basu, Ionut Bebu, Alicia J Jenkins, Julie A Stoner, Ying Zhang, Richard L Klein, Maria F Lopes-Virella, Timothy Garvey, Matthew J Budoff, Petar Alaupovic, Timothy J Lyons, Diabetes Control Complications Trial/Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions Complications Research Group
Keywords apolipoprotein C3, major adverse cardiac event, type 1 diabetes
Abstract

APOB, APOC3, and APOE and apolipoprotein-defined lipoprotein subclasses (ADLSs; based on qualitative apolipoprotein complement) have been associated with dyslipidemia and CVD. Our main objective was to define associations of serum apolipoproteins and ADLSs with "any CVD" and "major atherosclerotic cardiovascular events" (MACEs) in a prospective study of T1D. Serum apolipoproteins and ADLSs (14 biomarkers in total) were measured in sera (obtained between 1997 and 2000) from a subset ( = 465) of the Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications cohort. Prospective associations of "any CVD" (myocardial infarction, stroke, confirmed angina, silent myocardial infarction, revascularization, or congestive heart failure) and MACEs (fatal or nonfatal myocardial infarction or stroke), over 5,943 and 6,180 patient-years follow-up, respectively, were investigated using Cox proportional hazards models that were unadjusted and adjusted for risk factors. During 15 years of follow-up, 50 "any CVD" events and 24 MACEs occurred. Nominally significant positive univariate associations with "any CVD" were APOB, APOC3 and its subfractions [heparin precipitate, heparin-soluble (HS)], and ADLS-defined Lp-B. In adjusted analyses, APOC3-HS remained nominally significant. Nominally significant positive univariate associations with MACEs were APOC3 and its subfractions and Lp-B:C; those with total APOC3 and APOC3-HS persisted in adjusted analyses. However, these associations did not reach significance after adjusting for multiple testing. There were no significant associations of APOA1, APOA2, APOE, or other ADLSs with either "any CVD" or MACEs. These hypothesis-generating data suggest that total serum APOC3 and APOC3 in HDL are potentially important predictive biomarkers for any CVD and MACEs in adults with T1D.

Year of Publication
2019
Journal
Journal of lipid research
Volume
60
Issue
8
Number of Pages
1432-1439
Date Published
08/2019
ISSN Number
1539-7262
DOI
10.1194/jlr.P090647
Alternate Journal
J. Lipid Res.
PMID
31203233
PMCID
PMC6672041
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