ADVANCED LIPID TESTING
Topic Highlights
● Cardiovascular risk factors extend beyond cholesterol to include small proteins and lipoprotein subtypes.
● Cardiovascular risk is better assessed by identifying measurable lipid risk factors using newer techniques.
● The kinds of lipids and their functions, the risk factors associated with abnormal lipid levels, the advanced lipid testing methods, and the role of these methods in clinical assessment are discussed in detail in this presentation.
Transcript
Lipid-related cardiovascular risk factors include not only cholesterol but also lipoproteins and their subtypes. Cardiovascular risk is best assessed by identifying measurable lipid risk factors. Advanced lipid testing, therefore, plays a crucial role in clinical practice. This presentation discusses in detail the kinds of lipids and their functions, the risk factors associated with abnormal levels of lipids, and the role of advanced lipid testing in clinical assessment.
Atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (CVD) is a major cause of mortality and morbidity. Its main acute clinical manifestations are myocardial infarction and stroke. The treatment of risk factors is the most important, urgent, and effective way to prevent these diseases. Various forms of dyslipidemia (disorders of blood lipids) are important causative risk factors for atherosclerotic CVD. Other significant risk factors that are easily determined in clinical practice are smoking, overweight/obesity, hypertension, and diabetes.
Lipid testing is used here in the context of 'determination of lipids in blood for the evaluation of a person's cardiovascular risk status.' Lipid testing began early in the 20th century when the Lieberman'Burchard reaction for cholesterol was devised, making it possible to determine the concentration of plasma cholesterol, which soon led to the discovery that plasma cholesterol is often high in patients with myocardial infarction. In the mid-1960s, the prospective Framingham study demonstrated that cholesterol is a risk factor for the development of coronary heart disease (CHD). Soon after, researchers realized that cholesterol and other lipids in the blood are bound to proteins called apolipoproteins (apo) and are part of large complexes called lipoproteins.
Classification of Lipoproteins
●
very low density lipoprotein (VLDL),
estimated from triglyceride values
●
low-density lipoprotein (LDL), measured as
LDL cholesterol (LDL-C)
●
high-density lipoprotein (HDL), measured as
HDL cholesterol (HDL-C)
Of these groups, LDL carries a major part of plasma cholesterol and is the most atherogenic
lipoprotein class; hence, LDL-C is called 'the bad cholesterol.' In contrast, HDL-C protects
against atherosclerosis and is hence called 'the
good cholesterol.' Therefore, both high levels of LDL-C and low levels of HDL-C are risk factors
for CHD.
Lipid Profile
●
total cholesterol
●
triglycerides
●
LDL-C
●
HDL-C
●
non-HDL-C
●
ratios of LDL-C to HDL-C or LDL-C to total
In addition to this standard lipid profile, many laboratories also determine the
major apo components of LDL, VLDL, and HDL:
●
apo B
●
apo A-I
●
ratios of LDL-C to HDL-C or LDL-C to total
Apo B reflects the amount of LDL plus VLDL, and apo A-I indicates the
amount of HDL. There is presently an ongoing discussion if the apo's and
their ratios are better predictors of CHD than the lipid profile.
●
cholesterol content of the subclasses
of the major lipoprotein classes
●
size and number of lipoprotein
particles in the various subclasses
●
other lipoprotein species such as Lp(a)
Both LDL and HDL are heterogeneous lipoprotein classes
consisting of lipoprotein particles varying in size,
composition, and atherogenicity.
The protective HDL is also a heterogeneous
lipoprotein class, the subclasses of which have been ascribed
different atheroprotective potentials. Attention is directed
toward the larger HDL, particularly the large HDL2 subclass,
which appears to be the most protective HDL subclass. HDL2 is
actively engaged in reverse
cholesterol transport, the process by which cholesterol
can be transported away from atherosclerotic lesions to the
liver for excretion from the body via the bile. Lp(a) is a
distinct genetic form of LDL that contains apo(a) in addition
to apo B. Apo(a) has a structural similarity to plasminogen
. Lp(a) is a strong risk factor for clinical atherosclerosis.
Unlike LDL, Lp(a) does not respond to treatment with diet or statins.
However, its concentration is markedly reduced by nicotinic
acid.
Several methods are available for the determination
of lipoprotein subclasses, and these methods are still mostly
used in research or clinical trials. However, with the
increasing awareness of the importance of various subclasses in
the reverse
cholesterol transport of atherosclerosis and as risk
factors for CVD, these methods will undoubtedly be used more
frequently in clinical practice. This development will be in
response to clinicians' demands to obtain more advanced lipid
profiles in which lipoprotein subclasses are also determined.
Since the groundbreaking work of John
Gofman with analytical
ultracentrifugation in the 1990s, human plasma
lipoproteins have been well established as a very heterogeneous
group of proteins or particles, greatly varying in size,
density, and composition. The different characteristics of the
subclasses have made it possible to separate and quantify these
proteins or particles by physicochemical methods, such as electrophoresis
and ultracentrifugation.
Polyacrylamide
gradient gel
electrophoresis has been used for 25 years as a
practical method for the separation and analysis of
lipoproteins of different sizes, such as HDL and LDL particles
that vary in diameter (7'12 nm and 21'28 nm, respectively). Polyacrylamide
gels have pores of decreasing size in the direction of
the electrophoretic mobility, preventing lipoproteins of a
certain size from moving further on in the gel in the electric
field.
To determine LDL subclasses, 2%'16% polyacrylamide
gel is generally applied. Gradient gel electrophoresis of LDL
has identified seven subclasses. There is, however, no standard
nomenclature for these subclasses. At present, the most useful
terms for LDL subclasses are the two phenotypes
of LDL described by Austin. Phenotype A contains large LDL,
while phenotype B consists of sdLDL. The determination of sdLDL
is the most significant measurement of LDL subclasses for the
evaluation of a person's risk for CHD.
In ultracentrifugation, the density of lipoproteins
is due to their lipid content; that is, the lipid/protein ratio
determines the separation and identification of the various
subclasses. Analytical ultracentrifugation is the standard for
a quantification of lipoprotein classes, but it is too
laborious and expensive for routine use. The recently developed
SVAP method is a single vertical spin density
gradient ultracentrifugation combined with cholesterol
analysis of the separated lipoprotein classes. The advantages
of SVAP are the use of small plasma samples, short
centrifugation time, and determination of an advanced
quantitative lipoprotein subclass spectrum.
The determination of plasma lipoprotein subclasses
by nuclear
magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy started in the
1990s. A plasma sample is placed in the NMR analyzer, and a
spectrum is recorded within a minute. By computer analysis of
the spectrum, the amounts of large, medium, and small particle
subclasses of VLDL, LDL, and HDL are estimated.
Studies of the subclasses of both LDL and HDL have
revealed important clinical and metabolic differences between
the subclasses. Several prospective epidemiological
studies have shown that sdLDL is a very important risk
factor for the development of atherosclerotic CVD. According to
some studies, sdLDL is an even better indicator of CHD risk
than LDL-C. For example, in a prospective Quebec study
comprising more than 2000 men free of CHD, the subjects with
high levels of sdLDL but normal concentrations of LDL-C had a
fourfold increased risk for new events of CVD. High levels of
sdLDL are common in hypertriglyceridemia,
which is often present in type 2
diabetes and metabolic
syndrome. The concentration of sdLDL can be reduced by
lifestyle improvements and by pharmacological
treatment with statins, nicotinic acid, and fibrates.
Both progression and severity of coronary
atherosclerosis are inversely proportional to the large HDL2b
subclass, which appears to have a more protective effect
against atherosclerosis than other HDL subclasses. There is a
pronounced difference in the distribution of HDL subclasses
between men and women. Particularly noteworthy is that men have
lower levels of protective HDL2, which partly explains the
higher incidence of CHD in males than in females at a younger
age. Fibrates and statins increase HDL-C by about 5%'20%, and
nicotinic acid increases HDL-C by 20%'40%. The pharmacological
treatment with statins, nicotinic acid, and fibrates also
decreases the HDL2 subclass by about 100% and the HDL3 subclass
by 20%, which further illustrates the importance of evaluating
the subclasses of the major lipoprotein classes by advanced
lipid testing.
Given the prevalence of CHD and CVD, tests to
obtain detailed profiles of lipid subclasses are a necessity.
Advanced lipid testing, though not recommended for routine
screening, is important in identifying individuals at high risk
of CHD or CVD, especially those with a family history of
premature CHD, individuals with an intermediate risk for CHD,
and postmenopausal
women. These tests will facilitate early identification, more
effective treatments, and an overall reduction in the
occurrence of atherosclerotic CVD.
Using physicochemical methods, plasma lipoproteins have
been classified into three major groups:
Presently, most laboratories provide clinicians with the following lipid profile:
Advanced lipid testing measures the following:
Small and dense LDL (sdLDL) particles, an LDL subclass, are
more atherogenic than the larger, more buoyant LDL particles
because they are smaller (penetrate easier into the arterial
wall), more prone to modification by oxidation, and
therefore more rapidly taken up by the scavenger
receptors of the macrophages,
which then turn into foam
cells, a characteristic feature of atherosclerotic lesions.
sdLDL is now recognized as a strong risk factor for CHD both in
Western and Japanese populations. This observation is becoming
more and more evident that it is important to pay attention not
only to LDL-C, but also to sdLDL and its significance in the
evaluation of a patient's risk for CHD and in the prevention of
CHD.
To analyze HDL subfractions, a gradient in the range of 4%'30%
polyacrylamide concentration is used. With this technique, HDL
is separated into five distinct subclasses.