4.1 Article

Evaluation of a new equation for LDL-c estimation and prediction of death by cardiovascular related events in a German population-based study cohort

Journal

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00365513.2018.1432070

Keywords

Lipids; lipoproteins; cardiovascular diagnostic technics; LDL cholesterol; cardiovascular diseases; mortality; proportional hazards models; myocardial infarction; stroke

Funding

  1. German Federal Ministry of Education and Research (BMBF) [01ZZ96030, 01ZZ0701]
  2. German Competence Network Heart Failure, and the network 'Greifswald Approach to Individualized Medicine (GANI_MED)'
  3. Ministry of Cultural Affairs of the German Federal State of Mecklenburg-West Pomerania [03IS2061A]
  4. EU
  5. German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD)
  6. Brazilian Higher Education Personnel Improvement Coordination (CAPES)

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A simple equation established by Cordova & Cordova (LDL-COR) was developed to provide an improved estimation of LDL-cholesterol in a large Brazilian laboratory database. We evaluated this new equation in a general population cohort in Pomerania, north-eastern Germany (SHIP Study) compared to other existing formulas (Anandaraja, Teerakanchana, Chen, Hattori, Martin, Friedewald and Ahmadi), and its power in the prediction of death by atherosclerosis related events as the primary outcome. Analysis was conducted on a cohort of 4075 individuals considering age, gender, use of lipid lowering therapy and associated co-morbidities such as diabetes, hepatic, kidney and thyroid disease. LDL-COR values had a lower standard deviation compared to the previously published equations: 0.92 versus 1.02, 1.02, 1.03, 1.04, 1.09, 1.10 and 1.74mmol/L, respectively. All of the factors known to affect the results obtained by the Friedewald's equation (LDL-FW), except fibrate use, were associated with the difference between LDL-COR and LDL-FW (p<.01), with TSH being borderline (p=.06). LDL-COR determined a higher hazard ratio (1.23 versus 1.12, 1.19, 1.21, 1.19, 1.21 and 1.19) for cardiovascular disease related mortality, incident stroke or myocardial infarction compared to the other evaluated formulas, except for Ahmadi's (1.24), and the same adjusted predictive power considering all confounding factors. The proposed simple equation was demonstrated to be suitable for a more precise LDL-c estimation in the studied population. Since LDL-c is a parameter frequently requested by medical laboratories in clinical routine, and will probably remain so, precise methods for its estimation are needed when direct measurement is not available.

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