Abstract 235: Prevalence of Lipoprotein(a) Measurements and Extent of Lipoprotein(a) Elevations in 2,266 Patients with Aortic Stenosis: Results from an Academic Echocardiography Laboratory Practice Setting

2016 
Background: The LPA gene causes elevated lipoprotein(a) (Lp(a)) levels and causally mediates calcific aortic valve stenosis (AS). Elevated Lp(a) and its associated oxidized phospholipids (OxPL-apoB) predict the progression of pre-existing AS and need for aortic valve replacement and are targets of therapy. Methods: We determined the prevalence and the extent of Lp(a) elevation in patients with AS diagnosed by echocardiography performed at the University of California San Diego between 2010-2015. Severity of AS was classified as critical, severe, moderate, mild, or trace. Lp(a) levels were organized as Lp(a) 100 mg/dL. Results: 2,266 patients with AS were found, with 130 critical, 333 severe, 477 moderate, 1318 mild, and 8 cases of trace AS. Mean age was 75.0 and range 18-106 years. 51% of patients were male. Prevalence of any Lp(a) measurement was 159/2,266 patients (7.02%). The number (%) of patients with an Lp(a) level was: 1) critical (n=4, 3.1%), 2) severe (n=28, 8.4%), 3) moderate (n=56, 11.7%), 4) mild (n=71, 5.4%), and 5) trace (n=0). The extent of Lp(a) elevation within each AS category is in Table 1: 55/159 (34%), 35/159 (22%) and 19/159 (12%) of patients had Lp(a) >30 mg/dL, >50 mg/dL and >100 mg/dL, respectively. Conclusion: Lp(a) was measured in only 7.0% of patients with AS in an academic setting. Given the ongoing development of therapies to lower Lp(a) in patients with AS, educational efforts are needed to raise awareness of Lp(a) as a causal risk factor for AS.
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