Apolipoprotein C-III Strongly Correlates with Activated Factor VII–Anti-Thrombin Complex: An Additional Link between Plasma Lipids and Coagulation

Nicola Martinelli, Marcello Baroni, Annalisa Castagna, Barbara Lunghi, Filippo Stefanoni, Federica Tosi, Jacopo Croce, Silvia Udali, Barry Woodhams, Domenico Girelli, Francesco Bernardi, Oliviero Olivieri
2019 Thrombosis and Haemostasis  
AbstractActivated factor VII–anti-thrombin (FVIIa-AT) complex is a potential biomarker of pro-thrombotic diathesis reflecting FVIIa–tissue factor (TF) interaction and has been associated with mortality in patients with coronary artery disease (CAD). Previous data indicated plasma lipids as predictors of FVIIa-AT variability, and plasma lipoproteins as potential stimulators of the coagulation cascade. Our aim was to evaluate the relationships between FVIIa-AT plasma concentration and a broad
more » ... ipoprotein profile (including ApoA-I, ApoB, ApoC-III and ApoE). Within the framework of the observational Verona Heart Study, we selected 666 subjects (131 CAD-free and 535 CAD, 75.4% males, mean age: 61.1 ± 10.9 years) not taking anticoagulant drugs and for whom plasma samples were available for both FVIIa-AT assay and a complete lipid profile. Plasma concentration of FVIIa-AT levels significantly and directly correlated with total and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglycerides, ApoA-I, ApoC-III and ApoE levels. ApoC-III showed the strongest correlation (R = 0.235, p = 7.7 × 10−10), confirmed in all the sub-group analyses (males/females and CAD/CAD-free). Only ApoC-III remained associated with FVIIa-AT plasma concentration, even after adjustment for sex, age, CAD diagnosis, body mass index, renal function, smoking status, lipid-lowering therapies and FVIIa levels. The APOC3 gene locus-tagging polymorphism rs964184, previously linked with cardiovascular risk and plasma lipids by genome-wide association studies, was associated with both ApoC-III and FVIIa-AT plasma concentration. Our results indicate a strong association between ApoC-III and FVIIa-AT levels, thereby suggesting that an increased ApoC-III concentration may identify subjects with a pro-thrombotic diathesis characterized by an enhanced TF-FVIIa interaction and activity.
doi:10.1055/s-0038-1676817 fatcat:l424nuyvfzcqblblzpfzinvsim