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Lipoprotein Apheresis for Lipoprotein(a)-Associated Cardiovascular Disease: Prospective 5 Years of Follow-Up and Apolipoprotein(a) Characterization

Authors :
Eberhard Roeseler
Ulrich Julius
Franz Heigl
Ralf Spitthoever
Dennis Heutling
Paul Breitenberger
Josef Leebmann
Walter Lehmacher
Pia R. Kamstrup
Børge G. Nordestgaard
Winfried Maerz
Asma Noureen
Konrad Schmidt
Florian Kronenberg
Andreas Heibges
Reinhard Klingel
Volker Schettler
Thomas Benzing
Hildegard Christ
Sabine Wehner
Ines Schulz-Merkel
Ralf Kuehn
Albrecht Wagner
Wilfried Dschietzig
Claudia Ernst
Michael Koziolek
Johannes Bunia
Peter Kulzer
Klaus-Dieter Kraenzle
Markus Toelle
Gerhard Riechers
Christine Kuehnel
Tobias Marsen
Christina Saehn
Jens Ringel
Harald Messner
Andreas Oehring
Carsten Schuerfeld
Michael Wintergalen
Falko Neumann
Harald Kaul
Martin Haesner
Juergen Passfall
Andrea Benschneider
Stefan Heidenreich
Winfried März
Ruediger Klaes
Priska Binner
Hans Dieplinger
Gertraud Erhart
Cordula Fassbender
Source :
Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology. 36(9)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Objective— Lipoprotein(a)-hyperlipoproteinemia (Lp(a)-HLP) along with progressive cardiovascular disease has been approved as indication for regular lipoprotein apheresis (LA) in Germany since 2008. We aimed to study the long-term preventive effect of LA and to assess hypothetical clinical correlations of apolipoprotein(a) (apo(a)) by analyzing genotypes and phenotypes. Approach and Results— This prospective observational multicenter study included 170 patients with Lp(a)-HLP and progressive cardiovascular disease (48.9 years median age at diagnosis) despite other cardiovascular risk factors, including low-density lipoprotein cholesterol had maximally been treated (mean baseline low-density lipoprotein cholesterol: measured, 2.56 mmol/L [98.9 mg/dL] and corrected, 1.72 mmol/L [66.3 mg/dL]). Patients were prospectively investigated during a 5-year period about annual incidence rates of cardiovascular events. In addition, apo(a) isoforms and polymorphisms at the apo(a) gene ( LPA ) were characterized. One hundred fifty-four patients (90.6%) completed 5 years of follow-up. Mean Lp(a) concentration before commencing regular LA was 108.1 mg/dL. This was reduced by a single LA treatment by 68.1% on average. Significant decline of the mean annual cardiovascular event rate was observed from 0.58±0.53 2 years before regular LA to 0.11±0.15 thereafter ( P Conclusions— Results of 5 years of prospective follow-up confirm that LA has a lasting effect on prevention of cardiovascular events in patients with Lp(a)-HLP. Patients clinically selected by progressive cardiovascular disease were characterized by a highly frequent expression of small apo(a) isoforms. Only Lp(a) concentration seemed to comprehensively reflect Lp(a)-associated cardiovascular risk, however.

Details

ISSN :
15244636
Volume :
36
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5f20ef915d7985d3248ac62a72c4137a