Lipoprotein(a) is robustly associated with aortic valve calcium

Author:

Kaiser YannickORCID,Singh Sunny S,Zheng Kang H,Verbeek Rutger,Kavousi Maryam,Pinto Sara-Joan,Vernooij Meike W,Sijbrands Eric J G,Boekholdt S Matthijs,de Rijke Yolanda B,Stroes Erik S G,Bos Daniel

Abstract

ObjectivesTo investigate the prevalence and quantity of aortic valve calcium (AVC) in two large cohorts, stratified according to age and lipoprotein(a) (Lp(a)), and to assess the association between Lp(a) and AVC.MethodsWe included 2412 participants from the population-based Rotterdam Study (52% women, mean age=69.6±6.3 years) and 859 apparently healthy individuals from the Amsterdam University Medical Centers (UMC) outpatient clinic (57% women, mean age=45.9±11.6 years). All individuals underwent blood sampling to determine Lp(a) concentration and non-enhanced cardiac CT to assess AVC. Logistic and linear regression analyses were performed to investigate the associations of Lp(a) with the presence and amount of AVC.ResultsThe prevalence of AVC was 33.1% in the Rotterdam Study and 5.4% in the Amsterdam UMC cohort. Higher Lp(a) concentrations were independently associated with presence of AVC in both cohorts (OR per 50 mg/dL increase in Lp(a): 1.54 (95% CI 1.36 to 1.75) in the Rotterdam Study cohort and 2.02 (95% CI 1.19 to 3.44) in the Amsterdam UMC cohort). In the Rotterdam Study cohort, higher Lp(a) concentrations were also associated with increase in aortic valve Agatston score (β 0.19, 95% CI 0.06 to 0.32 per 50 mg/dL increase).ConclusionsLp(a) is robustly associated with presence of AVC in a wide age range of individuals. These results provide further rationale to assess the effect of Lp(a) lowering interventions in individuals with early AVC to prevent end-stage aortic valve stenosis.

Funder

Ministry of Health, Welfare, and Sports

Netherlands Heart Foundation

Netherlands Organization for Health Research and Development

Municipality of Rotterdam

Research Institute for Diseases in the Elderly

Netherlands Genomics Initiative

Ministry of Education, Culture, and Science

European Commission

Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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