4.7 Article

Lipoprotein(a) Levels at Birth and in Early Childhood: The COMPARE Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
Volume 107, Issue 2, Pages 324-335

Publisher

ENDOCRINE SOC
DOI: 10.1210/clinem/dgab734

Keywords

lipoprotein(a); children; cardiovascular disease; lipoproteins; cholesterol

Funding

  1. Research Foundation at Rigshospitalet
  2. Danish Heart Association
  3. Danish Children's Heart Foundation
  4. Candy's Foundation
  5. Toyota Foundation
  6. Herlev-Gentofte Hospital Research Foundation

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Lipoprotein(a) levels in cord blood can serve as a proxy for neonatal venous blood levels, and birth levels can predict future levels. Additionally, the correlation between neonatal and infant levels and parental levels is weak.
Background and Objective: High lipoprotein(a) is a genetically determined causal risk factor for cardiovascular disease, and 20% of the adult population has high levels (ie, >42 mg/dL, >88 nmol/L). We investigated whether early life lipoprotein(a) levels measured in cord blood may serve as a proxy for neonatal venous blood levels, whether lipoprotein(a) birth levels (ie, cord or venous) predict levels later in life, and whether early life and parental levels correlate. Methods: The Compare study is a prospective cohort study of newborns (N = 450) from Copenhagen, Denmark, including blood sampling of parents. Plasma lipoprotein(a) was measured in cord blood (N = 402), neonatal venous blood (N = 356), and at 2 (N = 320) and 15 months follow-up (N = 148) of infants, and in parents (N = 705). Results: Mean lipoprotein(a) levels were 2.2 (95% CI, 1.9-2.5), 2.4 (2.0-2.7), 4.1 (3.4-4.9), and 14.6 (11.4-17.9) mg/dL in cord, neonatal venous, and 2- and 15-month venous samples, respectively. Lipoprotein(a) levels in cord blood correlated strongly with neonatal venous blood levels (R-2 = 0.95, P< 0.001) and neonatal levels correlated moderately with 2- and 15-month levels (R-2 = 0.68 and 0.67, both P< 0.001). Birth levels >= 90th percentile predicted lipoprotein(a) > 42 mg/dL at 15 months with positive predictive values of 89% and 85% for neonatal venous and cord blood. Neonatal and infant levels correlated weakly with parental levels, most pronounced at 15 months (R-2 = 0.22, P< 0.001). Conclusions: Lipoprotein(a) levels are low in early life, cord blood may serve as a proxy for neonatal venous blood, and birth levels >= 90th percentile can identify newborns at risk of developing high levels.

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