Time to ditch HDL-C as a measure of HDL function?
- PMID: 28777110
- PMCID: PMC5659345
- DOI: 10.1097/MOL.0000000000000446
Time to ditch HDL-C as a measure of HDL function?
Abstract
Purpose of review: Epidemiological and clinical studies link low levels of HDL cholesterol (HDL-C) with increased risk of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (CVD). However, genetic polymorphisms linked to HDL-C do not associate consistently with CVD risk, and randomized clinical studies of drugs that elevate HDL-C via different mechanisms failed to reduce CVD risk in statin-treated patients with established CVD. New metrics that capture HDL's proposed cardioprotective effects are therefore urgently needed.
Recent findings: Recent studies demonstrate cholesterol efflux capacity (CEC) of serum HDL (serum depleted of cholesterol-rich atherogenic lipoproteins) is an independent and better predictor of incident and prevalent CVD risk than HDL-C. However, it remains unclear whether therapies that increase CEC are cardioprotective. Other key issues are the impact of HDL-targeted therapies on HDL particle size and concentration and the relationship of those changes to CEC and cardioprotection.
Summary: It is time to end the clinical focus on HDL-C and to understand how HDL's function, protein composition and size contribute to CVD risk. It will also be important to link variations in function and size to HDL-targeted therapies. Developing new metrics for quantifying HDL function, based on better understanding HDL metabolism and macrophage CEC, is critical for achieving these goals.
Conflict of interest statement
J.W. Heinecke is named as a co-inventor on patents from the US Patent Office on the use of HDL markers to predict the risk of cardiovascular disease. Dr. Heinecke has served as a consultant for Kowa, Merck, Amgen, Bristol Meyer Squibb, GSK, and Pacific Biomarkers.
G.E. Ronsein has no conflicts of interest.
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