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Plasma phospholipid transfer protein activity in patients with low HDL and cardiovascular disease treated with simvastatin and niacin.

Author(s): Cheung MC, Wolfbauer G, Kennedy H, Brown BG, Albers JJ

Affiliation(s): Division of Metabolism, Endocrinology, and Nutrition, University of Washington, School of Medicine, Seattle 98103, USA. mccheung@u.washington.edu

Publication date & source: 2001-09-28, Biochim Biophys Acta., 1537(2):117-24.

Publication type: Clinical Trial; Randomized Controlled Trial

Plasma phospholipid transfer protein (PLTP) is an important modulator of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) metabolism, regulating its particle size, composition, and mass. In patients with low HDL and cardiovascular disease (CVD), plasma PLTP activity is positively correlated with the concentration of HDL particles containing apo A-I but not apo A-II (Lp(A-1)). We recently completed a study to determine the effect of simvastatin and niacin (S-N) therapy on disease progression/regression in these patients, and found that this therapy selectively increased Lp(A-I). To determine if PLTP was also increased with this drug therapy, we measured the PLTP activity in the plasma of 30 of these patients obtained at baseline and after 12 months of therapy, and compared the changes to a similar group of 31 patients who received placebo for the drugs. No significant increase in PLTP activity was observed in either group of patients. However, changes in apo A-I and A-II between these two time points were correlated with the corresponding change in PLTP activity. The correlation coefficients were r=0.57 (P=0.001) and r=0.43 (P=0.02) for apo A-I, and r=0.54 (P=0.002) and r=0.41 (P=0.02) for apo A-II in the placebo and S-N group, respectively. At baseline, PLTP activity correlated positively with the percent of plasma apo A-I associated with Lp(A-I) (r=0.38, P=0.04) and the amounts of apo A-I in these particles (r=0.43, P=0.02). These relationships persisted in patients who took placebo for 12 months (r=0.46, P=0.009 and r=0.37, P=0.04, respectively), but was attenuated in those treated with S-N. These data indicate that S-N-induced increase in Lp(A-I) was PLTP-independent. It also confirms our previous observation that an interrelationship exists between PLTP and apo-specific HDL particle subclasses in CVD patients with low HDL, and that this relationship is altered by drug intervention.

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