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    Clin Chem. 2006 Jul;52(7):1331-8. Epub 2006 May 18.

    High lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2 is a risk factor for recurrent coronary events in postinfarction patients.

    Corsetti JP, Rainwater DL, Moss AJ, Zareba W, Sparks CE.

    Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, NY 14642, USA. James_Corsetti@urmc.rochester.edu

    BACKGROUND: Recent studies demonstrate that lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2 (Lp-PLA2) is a risk factor for cardiovascular disease presumably deriving from generation of proinflammatory and proatherogenic species through its hydrolytic activity on lipoprotein-associated phospholipids. The goal of this study was to assess the relationship of Lp-PLA2 with a set of thrombogenic, lipid, inflammatory, and metabolic blood markers and to determine whether plasma Lp-PLA2 is a risk factor for recurrent coronary events in postinfarction patients. METHODS: Factor analysis on the set of blood markers and Lp-PLA2 was performed for 766 patients of the Thrombogenic Factors and Recurrent Coronary Events (THROMBO) postinfarction study. Recurrent coronary event risk was assessed as a function of blood marker concentrations and Lp-PLA2 by Cox proportional hazards multivariable regression adjusted for significant clinical covariates. RESULTS: Factor analysis revealed that Lp-PLA2 was associated with one factor dominated by cholesterol and apolipoprotein B and another factor dominated by HDL-cholesterol and triglycerides, with little association with an inflammatory factor dominated by C-reactive protein. Multivariable analysis demonstrated as significant and independent predictors of risk of secondary coronary events only apolipoprotein B in a model without Lp-PLA2 (hazard ratio, 1.66; 95% confidence interval, 1.14-2.40) and only Lp-PLA2 in a model with Lp-PLA2 included [1.90 (1.31-2.75)]. CONCLUSIONS: Lp-PLA2 is a significant and independent predictor of risk for recurrent coronary events in postinfarction patients, and Lp-PLA2 is related to both hypercholesterolemia and high triglyceride-low HDL dyslipidemia in this study population.

    PMID: 16709622 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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