Cardiovascular Diseases Clinical Trial
To investigate the predictive value of using measures of cholesterol homeostasis to identify individuals at high risk of developing cardiovascular disease relative to established risk factors.
BACKGROUND:
Cholesterol is a major risk factor for coronary heart disease. The current approach to
assessing this risk factor is to measure levels in the blood as if blood levels were a
static and fixed phenomenon. Cholesterol levels in the blood are in fact a complex product
of transport of cholesterol and lipids into and out of various compartments: (1) from the
gut, liver or periphery into the blood; (2) from the blood into the periphery and the liver;
(3) de novo synthesis of cholesterol in the liver; and (4) excretion from the liver as bile
acids. It is possible that one or more of these processes may serve as better risk factors
for atherosclerosis or coronary events than simple measures of cholesterol. This study
addresses a new and potentially important question.
The study will utilize plasma samples from subjects participating in Cycle 6 of the
Framingham Offspring Study. The Framingham Offspring Study is a longitudinal community based
study initiated in 1971. A sample of 5,135 men and women, consisting of the offspring of the
original Framingham Heart Study and their spouses were enrolled for the study, the objective
of which was to identify common factors or characteristics that contribute to cardiovascular
disease (CVD) by following its incidence over a long period of time in a large group of
participants who had not yet developed overt symptoms of CVD or suffered a heart attack or
stroke.
DESIGN NARRATIVE:
The project includes a case-control study relating the new lipid findings to cardiovascular
disease (CVD), a cross-sectional study to establish normal values and associations with diet
and genotypes, and a prospective study of cardiovascular events during a 10-year follow-up
period. The specific aims are to 1) quantify circulating indicators of cholesterol
homeostasis [levels of phytosterols and cholestanol (surrogate measures of cholesterol
absorption) and cholesterol precursors (surrogate measures of cholesterol synthetic rates)]
in plasma samples from Framingham Offspring Study participants diagnosed with established
CVD and/or >50% carotid stenosis (N=165) not taking lipid-lowering medication and control
subjects matched for age, sex, body mass index, hypertension and smoking status (n=330); 2)
evaluate the validity of using indicators of cholesterol homeostasis to predict CVD risk in
the Framingham Offspring Study-Cycle 6 participants by a) establishing adult normal ranges
for circulating levels of phytosterol, cholestanol and cholesterol precursor (N=3378), b)
defining the relationship between phytosterol, cholestanol and cholesterol precursor levels,
and lipid, lipoprotein and apolipoprotein levels in plasma, c) defining the relationship
between phytosterol, cholestanol and cholesterol precursor levels and selected dietary
intake data (energy, protein, fat, saturated, monounsaturated, polyunsaturated and trans
fatty acids, cholesterol, fiber and antioxidant supplements) and d) determining the
relationship between phytosterol, cholestanol and cholesterol precursor levels and selected
genotype data related to CVD risk (gene loci of apo E, apo A-IV, scavenger receptor class B
type 1 [SRB1], and ATP-binding cassette [ABC] G5 and ABCG8 transporters); and 3) monitor
clinical events in the Framingham Offspring Study cohort throughout a 10-year period
(1995-2005) and relate these data to the phytosterol, cholestanol and cholesterol precursor
levels. Measures of cholesterol homeostasis will be quantified first in subjects identified
in specific aim #1 and then the balance of subjects identified in specific aim #2,
achievable now due to the development of a gas chromatographic method using a single plasma
sample. These data will be assessed relative to dietary, biochemical and genotype data
currently available for the cohort. The results of the study will define the relationship
between markers of cholesterol absorption and synthesis, and CVD outcomes; establish
reference values for measures of cholesterol absorption and synthesis; and assess the
predictive value of these measures to identify high risk individuals relative to established
risk factors.
;
Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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