Lipoprotein(a)-associated Atherothrombotic Risk in Hemodialysis Patients
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Background: Hemodialysis patients show a considerably higher risk of atherothrombotic disease than the general population. We investigated both lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] plasma levels and apolipoprotein(a) [apo(a)] phenotypes in relation to occurrence of atherothrombotic events in hemodialysis patients compared with subjects showing a normal kidney function.
Methods: Lp(a) levels and apo(a) isoforms were determined in 118 hemodialysis patients, including 59 with prior atherothrombotic events, and in 182 subjects with normal creatinine clearance, including 82 who experienced a prior atherothrombotic event.
Results: Lp(a) levels in hemodialysis patients (median; 20 mg/dl) were higher (p < 0.01) than in age- and sex-matched subjects with normal renal function without a history of atherothrombosis (11.3 mg/dl). Among hemodialysis patients, median Lp(a) levels were higher in subjects with than in those without prior atherothrombosis (34 vs. 15 mg/dl, p < 0.05). In hemodialysis patients and in subjects without nephropathy, the percentage of low-molecular-weight apo(a) phenotypes were significantly higher in patients with than in those without a history of prior atherothrombotic events (56.9% vs. 33.9%, p < 0.05; 62.2% vs. 25%, p < 0.00001,respectively). Stepwise regression analysis indicated that the presence of at least one apo(a) isoform of low molecular weight was an independent predictor of atherothrombosis in hemodialysis patients (p < 0.05).
Conclusions: Elevated Lp(a) plasma levels appear to be associated with atherothrombosis, independent of their origin due to genetic factors or related to the impaired kidney function. Low-molecular-weight apo(a) isoforms are reliable genetic markers of atherothrombosis both in patients with impaired kidney function and in subjects without nephropathy.
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