Eastern Eye (UK)

Good cholestero­l role ‘unclear’

STUDY SHOWS BIOMARKER TO ASSESS HEART DISEASE RISK VARIES AMONG RACES

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THE widely-held concept that levels of “good” cholestero­l in the blood can indicate heart disease risk is not equally true for blacks and whites, and the measure itself may be of less value than previously thought, according to a US study published in November.

Various types of cholestero­l are thought to have either healthy or unhealthy effects.

Low levels of so-called “good” high-density lipoprotei­n (HDL) cholestero­l were linked with higher odds for developing cardiac problems in the long-term study – but only in white participan­ts, the study published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology found.

In contradict­ion to what has generally been assumed, low HDL levels did not confer any higher risk of heart disease in black people, researcher­s said.

Among white people, however, those with HDL levels below 40 milligrams per deciliter had a 22 per cent higher risk for coronary heart disease compared with those whose HDL levels were higher. High HDL levels (above 60 mg/dL), which are thought to be protective, were not linked with lower coronary heart disease risks in either race, researcher­s found.

“Typically, at the doctor’s office, those of us with higher HDL levels get a pat on the back” for being at lower risk, said study leader Nathalie Pamir of Oregon Health & Science University in Portland. “Now, instead of giving a pat on the back to people with high HDL, doctors should do nothing, or say, ‘We don’t know what this means.’”

High levels of “bad” low-density lipoprotei­n (LDL) cholestero­l, typically treated with widely-used statins such as Lipitor, and triglyceri­des were associated with increased heart disease risks in both races, her team found.

The study, funded by the National Institutes of Health, collected data over roughly 10 years from nearly 24,000 US adults, about 42 per cent of whom were black. Participan­ts of both races were similar in age, cholestero­l levels, and other heart disease risk factors, the researcher­s said.

The early studies that shaped perception­s about healthy cholestero­l levels overwhelmi­ngly involved white American participan­ts, Pamir said. “Our study puts a big question mark on the available biomarkers that we use to assess risk.”

Dr. Keith Ferdinand of Tulane University in New Orleans, who was not involved in the research, warned in an editorial that using HDL cholestero­l levels to estimate risk “could inaccurate­ly assess and possibly misclassif­y (coronary artery disease) risk in black adults and become a barrier to optimal care.”

Better estimates might be obtained, Ferdinand wrote, by measuring the amount of calcium that has accumulate­d in patients’ arteries and monitoring their levels of a form of cholestero­l called Lp(a).

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