Q&A

Lipoprotein(a) and Cardiovascular Disease

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Identification of the problem
Office visits seldom include a thorough and complete patient history. A “good” family history should include first-degree relatives. Time-constrained practi­tioners may take a rudimentary family history of immediate relatives when a pedigree of the patient would be more appropriate.

Pedigree assessment offers a more specific picture of disease in families and identifies prevalence and incidence. Busy clinicians could have patients use an online resource to generate their own family pedigree. Or, as in most practices, a medical assistant or other appropriate office staff could initiate the process in the chart.

Patients with premature or advanced disease and significant family history need further investigation. A suspect history would include multiple family members with disease earlier in life than expected and perhaps early cardiovascular death. The personal history of the patient may include multiple cardiovascular incidents despite therapeutic intervention; despite taking lipid-lowering and/or antiplatelet therapy, the patient will present with progressive disease. Often, disease manifests in multiple areas of the vasculature or as restenosis of previous interventions.

Genetics
Lp(a) results from a genetic variation of the apolipoprotein(a) (LPA) locus on chromosome 6q27. Lp(a) is comprised of an apolipoprotein(b) (apoB)–containing LDL molecule that is bonded to LPA. LPA is structurally similar to plasminogen, the precursor for plasmin that degrades fibrin in blood clots. Due to this similarity, LPA can competitively inhibit plasmin activity and thereby increase risk for thrombosis.4,9

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