Kamstrup Pia R, Benn Marianne, Tybjaerg-Hansen Anne, Nordestgaard Børge G
Department of Clinical Biochemistry, Herlev Hospital, Copenhagen University Hospital, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Circulation. 2008 Jan 15;117(2):176-84. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.107.715698. Epub 2007 Dec 17.
Elevated lipoprotein(a) levels are associated with myocardial infarction (MI) in some but not all studies. Limitations of previous studies include lack of risk estimates for extreme lipoprotein(a) levels, measurements in long-term frozen samples, no correction for regression dilution bias, and lack of absolute risk estimates in the general population. We tested the hypothesis that extreme lipoprotein(a) levels predict MI in the general population, measuring levels shortly after sampling, correcting for regression dilution bias, and calculating hazard ratios and absolute risk estimates.
We examined 9330 men and women from the general population in the Copenhagen City Heart Study. During 10 years of follow-up, 498 participants developed MI. In women, multifactorially adjusted hazard ratios for MI for elevated lipoprotein(a) levels were 1.1 (95% CI, 0.6 to 1.9) for 5 to 29 mg/dL (22nd to 66th percentile), 1.7 (1.0 to 3.1) for 30 to 84 mg/dL (67th to 89th percentile), 2.6 (1.2 to 5.9) for 85 to 119 mg/dL (90th to 95th percentile), and 3.6 (1.7 to 7.7) for > or =120 mg/dL (>95th percentile) versus levels <5 mg/dL (<22nd percentile). Equivalent values in men were 1.5 (0.9 to 2.3), 1.6 (1.0 to 2.6), 2.6 (1.2 to 5.5), and 3.7 (1.7 to 8.0). Absolute 10-year risks of MI were 10% and 20% in smoking, hypertensive women aged >60 years with lipoprotein(a) levels of <5 and > or =120 mg/dL, respectively. Equivalent values in men were 19% and 35%.
We observed a stepwise increase in risk of MI with increasing levels of lipoprotein(a), with no evidence of a threshold effect. Extreme lipoprotein(a) levels predict a 3- to 4-fold increase in risk of MI in the general population and absolute 10-year risks of 20% and 35% in high-risk women and men.
在一些但并非所有研究中,脂蛋白(a)水平升高与心肌梗死(MI)相关。既往研究的局限性包括缺乏对极高脂蛋白(a)水平的风险评估、对长期冷冻样本的测量、未校正回归稀释偏倚以及缺乏一般人群的绝对风险估计。我们检验了这样一个假设,即极高脂蛋白(a)水平可预测一般人群中的心肌梗死,在采样后不久测量水平,校正回归稀释偏倚,并计算风险比和绝对风险估计值。
我们在哥本哈根城市心脏研究中对9330名一般人群中的男性和女性进行了研究。在10年的随访期间,498名参与者发生了心肌梗死。在女性中,脂蛋白(a)水平升高的心肌梗死多因素调整风险比,对于5至29mg/dL(第22至66百分位数)为1.1(95%CI,0.6至1.9),对于30至84mg/dL(第67至89百分位数)为1.7(1.0至3.1),对于85至119mg/dL(第90至95百分位数)为2.6(1.2至5.9),对于≥120mg/dL(>第95百分位数)相对于<5mg/dL(<第22百分位数)为3.6(1.7至7.7)。男性的相应值为1.5(0.9至2.3)、1.6(1.0至2.6)、2.6(1.2至5.5)和3.7(1.7至8.0)。脂蛋白(a)水平<5和≥120mg/dL的60岁以上吸烟、高血压女性10年心肌梗死的绝对风险分别为10%和20%。男性的相应值为19%和35%。
我们观察到随着脂蛋白(a)水平升高,心肌梗死风险呈逐步增加,没有阈值效应的证据。极高脂蛋白(a)水平可预测一般人群中心肌梗死风险增加3至4倍,高危女性和男性10年绝对风险分别为20%和35%。