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Apolipoprotein-defined lipoprotein subclasses, serum apolipoproteins, and carotid intima-media thickness in T1D.

Citation
Basu, A., et al. “Apolipoprotein-Defined Lipoprotein Subclasses, Serum Apolipoproteins, And Carotid Intima-Media Thickness In T1D.”. Journal Of Lipid Research, pp. 872-883.
Center University of Washington
Author Arpita Basu, Alicia J Jenkins, Julie A Stoner, Ying Zhang, Richard L Klein, Maria F Lopes-Virella, Timothy Garvey, David S Schade, Jamie Wood, Petar Alaupovic, Timothy J Lyons, Diabetes Control and Complications Trial/Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications Research Group
Keywords Apolipoprotein B, Apolipoprotein-A-I, Apolipoprotein-C-III carotid intima-media thickness, type 1 diabetes
Abstract

Circulating apolipoprotein-defined lipoprotein subclasses (ADLS) and apolipoproteins predict vascular events in the general and type 2 diabetes populations, but data in T1D are limited. We examined associations of ADLS, serum apolipoproteins, and conventional lipids with carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) measured contemporaneously and 6 years later in 417 T1D participants [men: n = 269, age 42 ± 6 y (mean ± SD); women: n = 148, age 39 ± 8 y] in the Epidemiology of Diabetes Interventions and Complications study, the follow-up of the Diabetes Control and Complications Trial (DCCT). Date were analyzed by multiple linear regression stratified by sex, and adjusted for time-averaged hemoglobin A1C, diabetes duration, hypertension, BMI, albuminuria, DCCT randomization, smoking, statin treatment, and ultrasound devices. In cross-sectional analyses, lipoprotein B (Lp-B), Lp-B:C, Lp-B:E+Lp-B:C:E, Apo-A-II, Apo-B, Apo-C-III-HP (heparin precipitate; i.e., Apo-C-III in Apo-B-containing lipoproteins), and Apo-E were positively associated with common and/or internal carotid IMT in men, but only Apo-C-III (total) was (positively) associated with internal carotid IMT in women. In prospective analyses, Lp-B, Apo-B, and Apo-C-III-HP were positively associated with common and/or internal carotid IMT in men, while Lp-A1:AII and Apo-A1 were inversely associated with internal carotid IMT in women. The only significant prospective association between conventional lipids and IMT was between triacylglycerols and internal carotid IMT in men. ADLS and apolipoprotein concentrations may provide sex-specific biomarkers and suggest mechanisms for IMT in people with T1D.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Journal of lipid research
Volume
59
Issue
5
Number of Pages
872-883
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1539-7262
DOI
10.1194/jlr.P080143
Alternate Journal
J. Lipid Res.
PMID
29576550
PMCID
PMC5928427
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