Apolipoprotein B Attenuates Albuminuria-Associated Cardiovascular Disease in Prevention of Renal and Vascular Endstage Disease (PREVEND) Participants

James P. Corsetti*, Ron T. Gansevoort, Stephan J. L. Bakker, Charles E. Sparks, Priya Vart, Robin P. F. Dullaart

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

14 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Whether urinary albumin excretion relates to higher levels of atherogenic apolipoprotein B fractions in the nondiabetic population is uncertain. Such a relationship could explain, in part, the association of elevated urinary albumin excretion with cardiovascular disease risk. We assessed the relationship of urinary albumin excretion with apolipoprotein B fractions and determined whether the association of elevated urinary albumin excretion with incident cardiovascular events is modified by high apolipoprotein B fraction levels. We performed a prospective study on 8286 nondiabetic participants (580 participants with cardiovascular disease; 4.9 years median follow-up time) with fasting lipids, apolipoprotein B, and urinary albumin excretion determined at baseline. With adjustment for sex and age, micro-and macroalbuminuria were associated with increased apolipoprotein B fractions (non-HDL cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, triglycerides, and apolipoprotein B). All four apolipoprotein B fractions modified associations of urinary albumin excretion with incident cardiovascular disease (hazard ratios for interaction terms ranged from 0.89 to 0.94 with 95% confidence intervals ranging from 0.84 to 0.99 and P values ranging from 0.001 to 0.02 by Cox proportional hazards modeling). These interactions remained present after additional adjustment for conventional risk factors, eGFR, cardiovascular history, and lipid-lowering and antihypertensive drug treatments. Such modification was also observed when urinary albumin excretion was stratified into normo-, micro-, and macroalbuminuria. We conclude that there is an association between elevated urinary albumin excretion and apolipoprotein B fraction levels and a negative interaction between these variables in their associations with incident cardiovascular events. Elevated urinary albumin excretion may share common causal pathways with high apolipoprotein B fractions in the pathogenesis of cardiovascular disease.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2906-2915
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of the American Society of Nephrology
Volume25
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec-2014

Keywords

  • DENSITY-LIPOPROTEIN CHOLESTEROL
  • CORONARY-HEART-DISEASE
  • ESTER-TRANSFER-PROTEIN
  • GLOMERULAR-FILTRATION-RATE
  • PERIPHERAL ARTERY-DISEASE
  • C-REACTIVE PROTEIN
  • A-I RATIO
  • NEPHROTIC SYNDROME
  • RISK-FACTORS
  • SKIN AUTOFLUORESCENCE

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