4.4 Article

Comparison of cardiometabolic risk biomarkers from a national. clinical laboratory with the US adult population

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL LIPIDOLOGY
Volume 9, Issue 6, Pages 817-823

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jacl.2015.07.014

Keywords

US population; NHANES; Lipids; Clinical laboratory; Biomarkers; Cardiovascular risk

Funding

  1. Health Diagnostic Laboratory, Inc.

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BACKGROUND: Clinical laboratory patient databases are an untapped source of valuable diagnostic and prognostic information. However, the lack of associated clinical and/or demographic information and questionable generalizability to nonpatient populations often limit utility of these data. OBJECTIVES: This study compared levels of cardiometabolic biomarkers between a national clinical laboratory patient cohort (Health Diagnostic Laboratory [HD Lab]) and the US population as inferred from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES, 2011-2012). METHODS: Sample sizes for HD Lab ranged from 199,000 to 739,000 and for NHANES from 2200 to 5300. The latter were weighted to represent the adult US population (similar to 220 million). Descriptive statistics were compared for body mass index, 5 lipid biomarkers, and 3 glycemic biomarkers. RESULTS: Using age-and sex-matched data, mean biomarker values (mgkIL unless noted) and percent differences (%) for HD Lab vs NHANES were body mass index (kg/m(2)), 29.1 vs 28.6 (1.7%); total cholesterol, 185 vs 193 (-4.1%); apolipoprotein B, 92 vs 90 (2.2%); low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, 107 vs 115 (-7%); high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, 53 vs 53 (0%); triglycerides, 128 vs 127 (0.8%); glucose, 99 vs 108 (-8.3%); insulin (uU/mL), 13.7 vs 13.4 (2.2%); and hemoglobin Alc (%), 5.6 vs 5.8 (-3.4%). Although all differences were statistically significant, only low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and glucose differed by more than 5%. These may reflect a greater use of medications among HD Lab patients and/or preanalytical factors. CONCLUSIONS: Cardiometabolic risk markers from a national clinical laboratory were broadly similar to those of the US population; thus, with certain caveats, data from the former may be generalizable to the latter. (C) 2015 National Lipid Association. All rights reserved.

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