Hyperlipidemia in Coronary Heart Disease III. EVALUATION OF LIPOPROTEIN PHENOTYPES OF 156 GENETICALLY DEFINED SURVIVORS OF MYOCARDIAL INFARCTION

Abstract
Although analysis of lipoprotein phenotypes is widely used to diagnose and classify the familial hyperlipidemias, an evaluation of this system as a method for genetic classification has hitherto not been published. The present study of 156 genetically defined survivors of myocardial infarction was therefore designed to examine the relationship between lipoprotein phenotypes and genetic lipid disorders. The lipoprotein phenotypes of each survivor was determined primarily by measurement of his plasma triglyceride and low density lipoprotein (LDL)-cholesterol concentrations; his genetic disorder was identified by analysis of whole plasma cholesterol and triglyceride levels in relatives. The mean levels of LDL-cholesterol discriminated statistically among the three monogenic lipid disorders; it was highest in survivors with familial hypercholesterolemia (261±61 mg/100 ml [mean ±SD]); intermediate in those with familial combined hyperlipidemia (197±50); and lowest in those with familial hypertriglyceridemia (155±36) (P < 0.005 among the three groups). However, on an individual basis no lipoprotein pattern proved to be specific for any particular genetic lipid disorder; conversely, no genetic disorder was specified by a single lipoprotein pattern. This lack of correlation occurred for the following reasons: (a) individual LDL-cholesterol levels frequently overlapped between disorders; (b) in many instances a small quantitative change in the level of either LDL-cholesterol or whole plasma triglyceride caused qualitative differences in lipoprotein phenotypes, especially in individuals with familial combined hyperlipidemia, who showed variable expression (types IIa, IIb, IV, or V); (c) lipoprotein phenotypes failed to distinguish among monogenic, polygenic, and sporadic forms of hyperlipidemia; (d) clofibrate treatment of some survivors with genetic forms of hyperlipidemia caused their levels of triglyceride and LDL-cholesterol to fall below the 95th percentile, thus resulting in a normal phenotype; and (e) β-migrating very low density lipoproteins (β-VLDL), previously considered a specific marker for the type III hyperlipidemic disorder, was identified in several survivors with different lipoprotein characteristics and familial lipid distributions. These studies indicate that lipoprotein phenotypes are not qualitative markers in the genetic sense but instead are quantitative parameters which may vary among different individuals with the same genetic lipid disorder. It would therefore seem likely that a genetic classification of the individual hyperlipidemic patient with coronary heart disease made from a quantitative analysis of lipid levels in his relatives may provide a more meaningful approach than determination of lipoprotein phenotypes.