Zambon A, Hokanson J E, Brown B G, Brunzell J D
Department of Medicine, Division of Metabolism, Endocrinology and Nutrition, University of Washington, Seattle, Wash. 98195-6426, USA.
Circulation. 1999 Apr 20;99(15):1959-64. doi: 10.1161/01.cir.99.15.1959.
Small, dense LDL particles are associated with coronary artery disease (CAD) and predict angiographic changes in response to lipid-lowering therapy. Intensive lipid-lowering therapy in the Familial Atherosclerosis Treatment Study (FATS) resulted in significant improvement in CAD. This study examines the relationship among LDL density, hepatic lipase (HL), and CAD progression, identifying a new biological mechanism for the favorable effects of lipid-altering therapy.
Eighty-eight of the subjects in FATS with documented coronary disease, apolipoprotein B levels >/=125 mg/dL, and family history of CAD were selected for this study. They were randomly assigned to receive lovastatin (40 mg/d) and colestipol (30 g/d), niacin (4 g/d) and colestipol, or conventional therapy with placebo alone or with colestipol in those with elevated LDL cholesterol levels. Plasma hepatic lipase (HL), lipoprotein lipase, and LDL density were measured when subjects were and were not receiving lipid-lowering therapy. LDL buoyancy increased with lovastatin-colestipol therapy (7.7%; P<0.01) and niacin-colestipol therapy (10.3%; P<0.01), whereas HL decreased in both groups (-14% [P<0.01] and -17% [P<0.01] with lovastatin-colestipol and niacin-colestipol, respectively). Changes in LDL buoyancy and HL activity were associated with changes in disease severity (P<0.001). In a multivariate analysis, an increase in LDL buoyancy was most strongly associated with CAD regression, accounting for 37% of the variance of change in coronary stenosis (P<0.01), followed by reduction in apolipoprotein Bl (5% of variance; P<0.05).
These studies support the hypothesis that therapy-associated changes in HL alter LDL density, which favorably influences CAD progression. This is a new and potentially clinically relevant mechanism linking lipid-altering therapy to CAD improvement.
小而密的低密度脂蛋白(LDL)颗粒与冠状动脉疾病(CAD)相关,并可预测降脂治疗后的血管造影变化。家族性动脉粥样硬化治疗研究(FATS)中的强化降脂治疗使CAD有显著改善。本研究探讨LDL密度、肝脂酶(HL)与CAD进展之间的关系,以确定改变脂质治疗产生有益效果的一种新的生物学机制。
FATS中88名有冠心病记录、载脂蛋白B水平≥125mg/dL且有CAD家族史的受试者被选入本研究。他们被随机分配接受洛伐他汀(40mg/d)和考来替泊(30g/d)、烟酸(4g/d)和考来替泊,或仅用安慰剂的常规治疗,LDL胆固醇水平升高者则加用考来替泊。在受试者接受和未接受降脂治疗时,分别测定血浆肝脂酶(HL)、脂蛋白脂酶和LDL密度。洛伐他汀-考来替泊治疗(7.7%;P<0.01)和烟酸-考来替泊治疗(10.3%;P<0.01)使LDL浮力增加,而两组的HL均降低(洛伐他汀-考来替泊组和烟酸-考来替泊组分别降低14%[P<0.01]和17%[P<0.01])。LDL浮力和HL活性的变化与疾病严重程度的变化相关(P<0.001)。在多变量分析中,LDL浮力增加与CAD消退最密切相关,占冠状动脉狭窄变化方差的37%(P<0.01),其次是载脂蛋白B1降低(方差的5%;P<0.05)。
这些研究支持以下假说:与治疗相关的HL变化改变LDL密度,从而对CAD进展产生有利影响。这是一种将改变脂质治疗与CAD改善联系起来的新的且可能具有临床相关性的机制。