Lower lipoprotein lipase activity was associated with severe angina, with 47% in the lowest quartile reporting class III or IV angina compared to 29% in the highest quartile (P=0.002).
Cohort
Coronary artery disease
Lowest LPL activity quartile vs Highest LPL activity quartile
Class III or IV angina, p=0.002
Absolute Event Rate: 47% vs 29%
p-value: p=0.002
BACKGROUND: Raised triglyceride-rich lipoproteins significantly increase the risk for cardiovascular disease. Variation in the activity of the enzyme lipoprotein lipase (LPL), which is crucial in the removal of these lipoproteins, may therefore modulate this risk. METHODS AND RESULTS: Postheparin levels of LPL activity and mass were measured in a large cohort of male coronary artery disease patients participating in the Regression Growth Evaluation Statin Study (REGRESS), a lipid-lowering regression trial. In addition, the relationships between LPL activity and mass and severity of angina pectoris according to the NYHA classification and silent ischemia on 24-hour ambulatory ECG monitoring were assessed. Patients in different LPL activity quartiles and mass had different severities of angina; a total of 47% of patients in the lowest LPL quartile reported class III or IV angina. In contrast, only 29% in the highest activity quartile (P:=0.002) had severe angina. These parameters were supported by ambulatory ECG results, for which the total ischemic burden in the lowest LPL activity quartile was 36. 5+/-104.1 mm x min compared with 14.8+/-38.8 mm x min in the highest quartile of LPL activity (P:=0.001). LPL activity levels were strongly correlated with LPL mass (r=0.70, P:<0.0001). A significant association between the LPL protein mass and NYHA class (P:=0.012) was also demonstrated. CONCLUSIONS: We have demonstrated a significant relationship between LPL mass and activity and severity of ischemia as defined by angina class and ambulatory ECG. These results suggest that LPL influences risk for coronary artery disease by both catalytic and noncatalytic mechanisms.
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John J.P. Kastelein
University of Amsterdam
J. Wouter Jukema
Broad Institute
Aeilko H. Zwinderman
Leiden University
Circulation
University of British Columbia
Leiden University Medical Center
Rotterdam University of Applied Sciences
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Kastelein et al. (Tue,) conducted a cohort in Coronary artery disease. Lowest LPL activity quartile vs. Highest LPL activity quartile was evaluated on Class III or IV angina (p=0.002). Lower lipoprotein lipase activity was associated with severe angina, with 47% in the lowest quartile reporting class III or IV angina compared to 29% in the highest quartile (P=0.002).
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a05134c8e0e1d4edb08dabb — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/01.cir.102.14.1629