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Baseline and on-statin treatment lipoprotein(a) levels for prediction of cardiovascular events: individual patient-data meta-analysis of statin outcome trials

Authors :
Terje R. Pedersen
Gregory G. Schwartz
Andrew Tonkin
Anastasia Lesogor
Helen M. Colhoun
Christiane Drechsler
Florian Kronenberg
Peter Willeit
John Simes
Paul M. Ridker
Sotirios Tsimikas
Anders G. Olsson
Samia Mora
Paul J. Nestel
Christoph Wanner
Source :
Willeit, P, Ridker, P M, Nestel, P J, Simes, J, Tonkin, A M, Pedersen, T R, Schwartz, G G, Olsson, A G, Colhoun, H M, Kronenberg, F, Drechsler, C, Wanner, C, Mora, S, Lesogor, A & Tsimikas, S 2018, ' Baseline and on-statin treatment lipoprotein(a) levels for prediction of cardiovascular events : individual patient-data meta-analysis of statin outcome trials ', The Lancet, vol. 392, no. 10155, pp. 1311-1320 . https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(18)31652-0
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2018.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Elevated lipoprotein(a) is a genetic risk factor for cardiovascular disease in general population studies. However, its contribution to risk for cardiovascular events in patients with established cardiovascular disease or on statin therapy is uncertain.METHODS: Patient-level data from seven randomised, placebo-controlled, statin outcomes trials were collated and harmonised to calculate hazard ratios (HRs) for cardiovascular events, defined as fatal or non-fatal coronary heart disease, stroke, or revascularisation procedures. HRs for cardiovascular events were estimated within each trial across predefined lipoprotein(a) groups (15 to FINDINGS: Analyses included data for 29 069 patients with repeat lipoprotein(a) measurements (mean age 62 years [SD 8]; 8064 [28%] women; 5751 events during 95 576 person-years at risk). Initiation of statin therapy reduced LDL cholesterol (mean change -39% [95% CI -43 to -35]) without a significant change in lipoprotein(a). Associations of baseline and on-statin treatment lipoprotein(a) with cardiovascular disease risk were approximately linear, with increased risk at lipoprotein(a) values of 30 mg/dL or greater for baseline lipoprotein(a) and 50 mg/dL or greater for on-statin lipoprotein(a). For baseline lipoprotein(a), HRs adjusted for age and sex (vs INTERPRETATION: In this individual-patient data meta-analysis of statin-treated patients, elevated baseline and on-statin lipoprotein(a) showed an independent approximately linear relation with cardiovascular disease risk. This study provides a rationale for testing the lipoprotein(a) lowering hypothesis in cardiovascular disease outcomes trials.FUNDING: Novartis Pharma AG.

Details

ISSN :
01406736
Volume :
392
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Lancet
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....82ab7522f95edf8333f4c52f73e98b03