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Clinical Chemistry Podcast

Imputation of Baseline LDL Cholesterol Concentration in Patients with Familial Hypercholesterolemia on Statins or Ezetimibe

5 min • 8 mars 2018

Familial hypercholesterolemia is a frequent genetic disorder encountered in clinical practice and is associated with high levels of serum LDL cholesterol known as the “bad cholesterol.” A diagnosis of familial hypercholesterolemia has important clinical implications with respect to risk of cardiovascular disease and a requirement for intensive pharmacological therapy. Often, the baseline LDL cholesterol before treatment is not available because the patient has initiated and continues on lipid lowering therapy, especially statins. Furthermore, the original baseline LDL cholesterol may predate the current status by many years and cannot be easily retrieved. The February 2018 issue of Clinical Chemistry published a paper describing a method to obtain an imputed, or estimated, baseline LDL cholesterol concentration in these patients who are already taking cholesterol lowering drugs. Both a computer program and a smartphone app are available from links in the paper. We are pleased to have the lead author of that paper as a guest on this podcast. Isabelle Ruel is a Clinical Biochemist at the Research Institute of the McGill University Health Center Royal Victoria Hospital in Montreal, Quebec, and is currently the national coordinator of the Canadian Registry on Familial Hypercholesterolemia.

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