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Abstract 9691: Lipoprotein Subclasses Are Associated With Hepatic Steatosis: Insights from the Prospective Multicenter Imaging Study for the Evaluation of Chest Pain (PROMISE) Clinical Trial

Authors :
Maros Ferencik
Robert W McGarrah
Maggie Nguyen
Ann M Navar
Nandini Meyersohn
Stephanie Giamberardino
Michael Lu
Pedro Staziaki
Stefan B Puchner
Daniel Bittner
Borek Foldyna
Neha J Pagidipati
William E Kraus
Geoffrey S Ginsburg
Pamela S Douglas
Udo Hoffmann
Source :
Circulation. 144
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2021.

Abstract

Introduction: Hepatic steatosis (HS) is associated with coronary artery disease (CAD) and cardiovascular (CV) events. Previously, we have demonstrated that granular measures of lipids (lipoprotein particle number/size) are associated with CAD and CV events and incremental to traditional lipid measures. Hypothesis: Granular measures of lipids are associated with HS detected by cardiac computed tomography (CT) and with HS detected by histopathology. Methods: We included 1524 subjects from the PROMISE trial. HS was defined as CT attenuation of the liver Results: Subjects with HS (n=413) were slightly younger (59±8 vs 61±8 yrs) and more likely men (53 vs 44%) as compared to controls (n=1111). Three lipoprotein factors were associated with HS: LDL/LDL particle size (OR 1.36, 95%CI 1.21-1.53, p Conclusions: We found association of small LDL, large HDL and large TG particles, previously associated with CV event risk, with HS phenotyped by CT and histopathology. These results suggest that use of lipoprotein subclasses may improve CV risk assessment in patients with HS.

Details

ISSN :
15244539 and 00097322
Volume :
144
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Circulation
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........5fbae0b5b86bbd664b3f697bbda5f336