Association between extremely high high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol and hypertensive retinopathy: results of a cross-sectional study from Kanagawa Investigation of Total Checkup Data from the National Database-6 (KITCHEN-6)

Author:

Nakajima KeiORCID,Higuchi Ryoko,Mizusawa Kaori,Nakamura Teiji

Abstract

ObjectivesDoubt has been cast on the atheroprotective effect of very high high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C). Hypertensive retinopathy (HR) is caused by persistent systemic hypertension. Therefore, we aimed to investigate the association between extremely high HDL-C (EH-HDL) and HR.DesignA cross-sectional study.ParticipantsA total of 4072 general Japanese population aged 40–74 years who underwent regular medical check-ups including fundus examinations.Outcome measuresHR and clinical parameters including serum HDL-C were investigated. HR was determined by the Keith-Wagener classification and the Scheie classifications for Hypertension and Atherosclerosis (n=4054 available). Serum HDL-C was divided into five categories: 30–49, 50–69, 70–89, 90–109 and ≥110 mg/dL.ResultsOverall, 828 (20.3%) subjects had Keith-Wagener-HR, 578 (14.3%) had hypertension-HR, and 628 (15.5%) had atherosclerosis-HR. Blood pressure decreased as HDL-C level increased, whereas the prevalences of HRs showed U-shaped curves against HDL-C with minimum values for HDL-C 90–109 mg/dL. In logistic regression analyses, EH-HDL ≥110 mg/dL was significantly associated with Keith-Wagener-HR and atherosclerosis-HR, compared with HDL-C 90–109 mg/dL after adjustments for age, sex and systolic blood pressure (OR 3.01, 95% CI 1.45 to 6.27 and OR 2.23, 95% CI 1.03 to 4.86). The hypertension-HR was not significantly associated with EH-HDL regardless of adjustment for the confounding factors (p=0.05–0.08). Although serum HDL-C as a continuous variable was inversely associated with three HRs, which disappeared after adjustment for the confounding factors.ConclusionEH-HDL may be associated with HR independently of blood pressure, suggesting that EH-HDL reflects a special atherosclerotic condition.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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