Lowering cholesterol early
in life protects against heart disease later
Newswise — New research from UT
Southwestern Medical Center indicates that lowering “bad” blood
cholesterol earlier in life, even by a modest amount, confers
substantial protection from coronary heart disease.
The new findings, appearing in the
March 23 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine, found
that people with genetic variations affording them lower low-density
lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol in their blood from birth were
significantly less likely to develop coronary heart disease later in
life than those without the variations. These variations exist in a
recently discovered gene called PCSK9.
Based on 15 years of data tracking
more than 12,000 multiethnic subjects ranging in age from 45 to 64,
the researchers found that people who had cholesterol-lowering
genetic variations that lowered their LDL level by about 40
milligrams per deciliter were eight times less likely to develop
coronary heart disease than those without the mutations. Those with
genetic profiles lowering their LDL by about 20 mg/dl from average
had a twofold reduction in heart disease.
“These data indicate that a
moderate, life-long reduction in LDL cholesterol is associated with
substantial reduction in the incidence of coronary events, even in
populations with a high prevalence of other cardiovascular risk
factors,” said Dr. Helen Hobbs, the study’s senior author, director
of the Eugene McDermott Center for Human Growth and Development and
an investigator in the Howard Hughes Medical Institute at UT
Southwestern. She also directs the Donald W. Reynolds Cardiovascular
Clinical Research Center at UT Southwestern. Dr. Hobbs coauthored
the study with Dr. Jonathan Cohen, professor of internal medicine
and researchers from the UT Health Science Center in Houston and the
University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson.
Dr. Scott Grundy, director of the
Center for Human Nutrition at UT Southwestern, served as chairman of
the National Cholesterol Education Program’s Expert Panel on
Detection, Evaluation and Treatment of High Blood Cholesterol in
Adults, which in 2001 set guidelines for the clinical use of
cholesterol-lowering medications to reduce the risk of
cardiovascular disease. “This study demonstrates the great
importance of high blood cholesterol in causing coronary heart
disease,” said Dr. Grundy.
“It also shows the benefit of
maintaining a low cholesterol level throughout life. The foundation
for keeping low blood cholesterol is a reduced intake of saturated
fats and cholesterol and maintaining a desirable body weight. But in
some people it may be necessary to add drugs to reduce cholesterol
levels. Fortunately, newer cholesterol-lowering drugs have been
developed that are both effective and safe for most people.
Previous research has established
that people with a high level of LDL cholesterol in their blood are
at greater risk of developing coronary heart disease. The present
study further documents that life-long reductions in LDL cholesterol
can actually help prevent heart disease.
Previous findings by Dr. Hobbs and
colleagues at UT Southwestern had identified specific mutations in
the gene called PCSK9 that are associated with lower LDL cholesterol
levels in people who have the mutations. Those genetic studies were
based on data gathered from the UT Southwestern-directed Dallas
Heart Study, a groundbreaking multiyear investigation of
cardiovascular disease involving 6,000 Dallas County residents.