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In the ILLUMINATE Trial, treatment with the cholesteryl ester transfer protein inhibitor torcetrapib resulted in a significant increase in both atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease events and total mortality which was not explained by changes in the routinely measured plasma lipids. To determine whether alterations in lipoproteins defined by their apoprotein content that are not estimated with conventional laboratory methods contributed to these unexpected events, we measured the apoB- and apoA-containing subclasses in a subgroup of ILLUMINATE participants. We find that torcetrapib treatment significantly increased the high-density lipoprotein subclasses LpA-I and LpA-I:A-II equally (p <0.0001) and the apoC-III content of high-density lipoprotein (p <0.001) without altering the apoB-containing subclasses. In conclusion, these findings provide further evidence that the untoward effects of torcetrapib were attributable to off-target effects and not related to disturbances in lipoprotein transport. Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Citation

John Bagdade, Philip Barter, Carmen Quiroga, Pierre Alaupovic. Effects of Torcetrapib and Statin Treatment on ApoC-III and Apoprotein-Defined Lipoprotein Subclasses (from the ILLUMINATE Trial). The American journal of cardiology. 2017 Jun 01;119(11):1753-1756

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PMID: 28431663

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