Dorothea Collins
University of Alberta
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The New England Journal of Medicine | 1999
Hanna Bloomfield Rubins; Sander J. Robins; Dorothea Collins; Carol L. Fye; James W. Anderson; Marshall B. Elam; Fred H. Faas; Esteban Linares; Ernst J. Schaefer; Gordon Schectman; Timothy J Wilt; Janet Wittes
BACKGROUND Although it is generally accepted that lowering elevated serum levels of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol in patients with coronary heart disease is beneficial, there are few data to guide decisions about therapy for patients whose primary lipid abnormality is a low level of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol. METHODS We conducted a double-blind trial comparing gemfibrozil (1200 mg per day) with placebo in 2531 men with coronary heart disease, an HDL cholesterol level of 40 mg per deciliter (1.0 mmol per liter) or less, and an LDL cholesterol level of 140 mg per deciliter (3.6 mmol per liter) or less. The primary study outcome was nonfatal myocardial infarction or death from coronary causes. RESULTS The median follow-up was 5.1 years. At one year, the mean HDL cholesterol level was 6 percent higher, the mean triglyceride level was 31 percent lower, and the mean total cholesterol level was 4 percent lower in the gemfibrozil group than in the placebo group. LDL cholesterol levels did not differ significantly between the groups. A primary event occurred in 275 of the 1267 patients assigned to placebo (21.7 percent) and in 219 of the 1264 patients assigned to gemfibrozil (17.3 percent). The overall reduction in the risk of an event was 4.4 percentage points, and the reduction in relative risk was 22 percent (95 percent confidence interval, 7 to 35 percent; P=0.006). We observed a 24 percent reduction in the combined outcome of death from coronary heart disease, nonfatal myocardial infarction, and stroke (P< 0.001). There were no significant differences in the rates of coronary revascularization, hospitalization for unstable angina, death from any cause, and cancer. CONCLUSIONS Gemfibrozil therapy resulted in a significant reduction in the risk of major cardiovascular events in patients with coronary disease whose primary lipid abnormality was a low HDL cholesterol level. The findings suggest that the rate of coronary events is reduced by raising HDL cholesterol levels and lowering levels of triglycerides without lowering LDL cholesterol levels.
The New England Journal of Medicine | 1999
Dennis E. Niewoehner; Marcia L. Erbland; Robert H. Deupree; Dorothea Collins; Nicholas J. Gross; Richard W. Light; Paula J. Anderson; Nancy A. Morgan
BACKGROUND AND METHODS Although their clinical efficacy is unclear and they may cause serious adverse effects, systemic glucocorticoids are a standard treatment for patients hospitalized with exacerbations of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). We conducted a double-blind, randomized trial of systemic glucocorticoids (given for two or eight weeks) or placebo in addition to other therapies, for exacerbations of COPD. Most other care was standardized over the six-month period of follow-up. The primary end point was treatment failure, defined as death from any cause or the need for intubation and mechanical ventilation, readmission to the hospital for COPD, or intensification of drug therapy. RESULTS Of 1840 potential study participants at 25 Veterans Affairs medical centers, 271 were eligible for participation and were enrolled; 80 received an eight-week course of glucocorticoid therapy, 80 received a two-week course, and 111 received placebo. About half the potential participants were ineligible because they had received systemic glucocorticoids in the previous 30 days. Rates of treatment failure were significantly higher in the placebo group than in the two glucocorticoid groups combined at 30 days (33 percent vs. 23 percent, P=0.04) and at 90 days (48 percent vs. 37 percent, P=0.04). Systemic glucocorticoids (in both groups combined) were associated with a shorter initial hospital stay (8.5 days, vs. 9.7 days for placebo, P=0.03) and with a forced expiratory volume in one second that was about 0.10 liter higher than that in the placebo group by the first day after enrollment. Significant treatment benefits were no longer evident at six months. The eight-week regimen of therapy was not superior to the two-week regimen. The patients who received glucocorticoid therapy were more likely to have hyperglycemia requiring therapy than those who received placebo (15 percent vs. 4 percent, P=0.002). CONCLUSIONS Treatment with systemic glucocorticoids results in moderate improvement in clinical outcomes among patients hospitalized for exacerbations of COPD. The maximal benefit is obtained during the first two weeks of therapy. Hyperglycemia of sufficient severity to warrant treatment is the most frequent complication.
Circulation | 2006
James D. Otvos; Dorothea Collins; David S. Freedman; Irina Shalaurova; Ernst J. Schaefer; Judith R. McNamara; Hanna E. Bloomfield; Sander J. Robins
Background— Changes in conventional lipid risk factors with gemfibrozil treatment only partially explain the reductions in coronary heart disease (CHD) events experienced by men in the Veterans Affairs High-Density Lipoprotein Intervention Trial (VA-HIT). We examined whether measurement of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) and high-density lipoprotein (HDL) particle subclasses provides additional information relative to CHD risk reduction. Methods and Results— This is a prospective nested case-control study of 364 men with a new CHD event (nonfatal myocardial infarction or cardiac death) during a 5.1-year (median) follow-up and 697 age-matched controls. Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy was used to quantify levels of LDL and HDL particle subclasses and mean particle sizes in plasma obtained at baseline and after 7 months of treatment with gemfibrozil or placebo. Odds ratios for a 1-SD increment of each lipoprotein variable were calculated with adjusted logistic regression models. Gemfibrozil treatment increased LDL size and lowered numbers of LDL particles (−5%) while raising numbers of HDL particles (10%) and small HDL subclass particles (21%). Concentrations of these LDL and HDL particles achieved with gemfibrozil were significant, independent predictors of new CHD events. For total LDL and HDL particles, odds ratios predicting CHD benefit were 1.28 (95% CI, 1.12 to 1.47) and 0.71 (95% CI, 0.61 to 0.81), respectively. Mean LDL and HDL particle sizes were not associated with CHD events. Conclusions— The effects of gemfibrozil on NMR-measured LDL and HDL particle subclasses, which are not reflected by conventional lipoprotein cholesterol measures, help to explain the demonstrated benefit of this therapy in patients with low HDL cholesterol.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1995
Hanna Bloomfield Rubins; Sander J. Robins; Dorothea Collins; Ali Iranmanesh; Timothy J Wilt; Douglas Mann; Michael Mayo-Smith; Fred H. Faas; Marshall B. Elam; Gale Rutan; James W. Anderson; Moti L. Kashyap; Gordon Schectman
In the present study we measured fasting lipid profiles in over 8,500 community-living men with coronary artery disease (CAD) to determine the distribution of lipid abnormalities in this population: 81% were white and 16% black; mean age 62.9 +/- 8 years; mean total cholesterol 214 +/- 41 mg/dl; low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol 140 +/- 37 mg/dl; high-density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol 39 +/- 11 mg/dl; and triglycerides 190 +/- 142 mg/dl. After adjusting for age, the only significant difference between blacks and whites was a higher HDL cholesterol in blacks (45 vs 38 mg/dl, p < 0.003). With use of cut points established by the National Cholesterol Education Program, 87% of subjects had high LDL cholesterol (> or = 100 mg/dl), 38% had low HDL cholesterol (< 35 mg/dl), and 33% had high triglycerides (> 200 mg/dl). We estimated that 42% of men with CAD would be definite candidates for cholesterol-lowering medication according to the National Cholesterol Education Program guidelines and that 41% of those in whom cholesterol-lowering medication would not be definitely indicated had low levels of HDL cholesterol. We conclude that (1) black men with CAD have substantially higher HDL cholesterol than white men, (2) almost 90% of male patients with CAD are candidates for dietary intervention and > 40% may need medications to lower LDL cholesterol, and (3) 40% of patients without a definite indication for cholesterol-lowering medications have low levels of HDL cholesterol.
Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2005
Bela F. Asztalos; Dorothea Collins; L. Adrienne Cupples; Serkalem Demissie; Katalin V. Horvath; Hanna E. Bloomfield; Sander J. Robins; Ernst J. Schaefer
Objective—To test the hypothesis whether determination of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) subpopulations provides more power to predict recurrent cardiovascular disease (CVD) events (nonfatal myocardial infarction, coronary heart disease death, and stroke) than traditional risk factors in the Veterans Affairs HDL Intervention Trial (VA-HIT). Methods and Results—Apolipoprotein A-I (apoA-I)–containing HDL subpopulations were quantitatively determined by nondenaturing 2D gel electrophoresis. Hazard ratios of recurrent CVD events were calculated by comparing VA-HIT subjects with (n=398) and without (n=1097) such events. Subjects with new CVD events had significantly lower HDL-C, apoA-I, and large cholesterol-rich HDL particle (α-1, α-2, pre–α-1, and pre–α-2) levels, significantly higher triglyceride, and small poorly lipidated HDL particle (pre–β-1 and α-3) levels than subjects without such events. Multivariate analyses indicated that α-1 and α-2 particle levels were significant negative risk factors, whereas α-3 level was a significant positive risk factor for new CVD events. Pre–β-1 level was a significant risk factor for new CVD events only in univariate analysis. A forward selection model indicated that α-1 was the most significant risk factor for recurrent CVD events among HDL particles. Conclusions—An altered HDL subpopulation profile marked with low α-1 and α-2 levels and a high α-3 level in coronary heart disease patients indicated an elevated risk for new CVD events. Moreover, α-1 and α-2 levels were superior to HDL-C levels in risk assessment in patients with low HDL-C in VA-HIT.
Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2002
Margaret E. Brousseau; John J. O’Connor; Jose M. Ordovas; Dorothea Collins; James D. Otvos; Tatyana Massov; Judith R. McNamara; Hanna Bloomfield Rubins; Sander J. Robins; Ernst J. Schaefer
Objective—We have previously reported that genetic variation at the cholesteryl ester transfer protein (CETP) Taq IB locus is correlated with plasma lipid levels and coronary heart disease (CHD) risk in the Framingham Offspring Study (FOS). In FOS, the B2 allele was associated with increased levels of high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol (HDL-C), decreased CETP activity, and reduced CHD risk for men having the B2B2 genotype. The present study was undertaken to further define the relationship between this polymorphism and CHD risk at the population level. Methods and Results—We tested for associations between the CETP Taq IB genotype and plasma lipoprotein levels, response to gemfibrozil therapy, and CHD end points in 852 men participating in the Veterans Affairs HDL-C Intervention Trial (VA-HIT), a study designed to explore the potential benefits of raising HDL levels in men having established CHD with low HDL-C (≤40 mg/dL) as their primary lipid abnormality. In VA-HIT, 13.9% of the men had the B2B2 genotype relative to 19.1% of the men in FOS (−27%, P <0.03), whereas more men in VA-HIT had the B1B1 genotype (15%, P <0.05). Similar to our finding in FOS, B2B2 men in VA-HIT had the highest mean level of HDL-C (32.6±4.8 mg/dL), followed by B1B2 men (32.0±5.3 mg/dL), and, last, by B1B1 men (30.9±4.9 mg/dL). Interestingly, B1B1 men, who had the least favorable plasma lipid profile at baseline, had the greatest triglyceride-lowering response to gemfibrozil (−34%, P =0.006). CETP Taq IB genotype was also associated with the risk of CHD end points in VA-HIT, with an adjusted risk ratio of 0.52 for B2B2 men (P =0.08). Conclusions—Our data demonstrate that in men with CHD and HDL deficiency, the CETP Taq I B2B2 genotype is (1) significantly reduced and (2) associated with higher levels of plasma HDL-C and lower CHD risk. Together with our earlier report, these results support the concept that increased HDL-C levels, resulting from reduced CETP activity, are associated with decreased CHD risk.
Atherosclerosis | 2001
Margaret E. Brousseau; Marek Bodzioch; Ernst J. Schaefer; Allison L. Goldkamp; Danuta Kielar; Mario Probst; Jose M. Ordovas; Charalampos Aslanidis; Karl J. Lackner; Hanna Bloomfield Rubins; Dorothea Collins; Sander J. Robins; Peter W.F. Wilson; Gerd Schmitz
HDL cholesterol (HDL-C) deficiency is the most common lipid abnormality observed in patients with premature coronary heart disease (CHD). Recently, our laboratory and others demonstrated that mutations in the ATP-binding cassette transporter 1 (ABCA1) gene are responsible for Tangier disease, a rare genetic disorder characterized by severely diminished plasma HDL-C concentrations and a predisposition for CHD. To address the question of whether common variants within the coding sequence of ABCA1 may affect plasma HDL-C levels and CHD risk in the general population, we determined the frequencies of three common ABCA1 variants (G596A, A2589G and G3456C) in men participating in the Veterans Affairs Cooperative HDL Cholesterol Intervention Trial (VA-HIT), a study designed to examine the benefits of HDL raising in men having low HDL-C (< or =40 mg/dl) and established CHD, as well as in CHD-free men from the Framingham Offspring Study (FOS). Allele frequencies (%) in VA-HIT were 31, 16, and 4 for the G596A, A2589G, and G3456C variants, respectively, versus 27, 12, and 2 in FOS (P<0.03). None of the variants were significantly associated with plasma HDL-C concentrations in either population; however, in VA-HIT, the G3456C variant was associated with a significantly increased risk for CHD end points, suggesting a role for this variant in the premature CHD observed in this population.
Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology | 2008
Sander J. Robins; Dorothea Collins; Jeanenne J. Nelson; Hanna E. Bloomfield; Bela F. Asztalos
Objective—Lipoprotein-associated phospholipase A2 (Lp-PLA2), a proinflammatory enzyme that predominantly circulates with low-density lipoprotein (LDL), has been shown in general populations to predict cardiovascular (CV) events. We sought to determine whether increased Lp-PLA2 would also predict CV events in the absence of high LDL-cholesterol (LDL-C), in a population with low high-density lipoprotein-cholesterol (HDL-C). Methods and Results—Plasma Lp-PLA2 activity was measured at baseline and after 6 months on-trial in 1451 men with low HDL-C (mean, 32 mg/dL) and low LDL-C (mean 110 mg/dL), randomized to either placebo or gemfibrozil therapy in the Veterans Affairs HDL Intervention Trial (VA-HIT). Over a quartile range of increasing Lp-PLA2 there was a significant increase in LDL-C and decrease in HDL-C (P<0.0001), and an increased percentage of myocardial infarction (MI), stroke, or CHD death (P=0.03 for trend). In Cox models, adjusted for major CV risk factors, a 1-SD increase in Lp-PLA2 was associated with a significant increase in CV events (hazard ratio [HR] 1.17 95% CI 1.04 to 1.32). Although gemfibrozil reduced Lp-PLA2 only modestly (6.6%), at higher levels of Lp-PLA2 gemfibrozil produced a significant reduction in CV events. Conclusions—In VA-HIT, a population with low HDL-C and LDL-C, high Lp-PLA2 independently predicted CV events that were reduced by gemfibrozil.
Stroke | 1997
Timothy J Wilt; Hanna Bloomfield Rubins; Sander J. Robins; Ward A. Riley; Dorothea Collins; Marshall B. Elam; Gale Rutan; James W. Anderson
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE A low HDL cholesterol (HDL-C) frequently occurs in conjunction with a desirable LDL cholesterol (LDL-C) and is a risk factor for coronary heart disease (CHD). Additionally, the presence of carotid atherosclerosis is a strong and independent predictor of morbidity and mortality in patients with CHD. This article describes the prevalence and correlates of sonographically detected carotid atherosclerosis in men with low levels of HDL-C and CHD but without elevated levels of LDL-C or total cholesterol. METHODS High-resolution B-mode ultrasonography was used to quantify intima-media wall thickness (IMT) in the common and internal carotid arteries and at the carotid artery bifurcation in 202 randomly selected male veterans with CHD and low levels of HDL-C who are participating in the VA HDL Intervention Trial. Ultrasonographic measurement of carotid artery wall stiffness was determined in a subset of 94 of these individuals. RESULTS The mean maximum and single greatest carotid artery IMT measurements were 1.41 and 2.58 mm, respectively. The prevalence of ultrasound-detected carotid atherosclerosis as defined by a mean maximum IMT > or = 1.3 mm was 58.9% and by single maximum IMT > or = 1.5 mm was 87.1%. IMT was associated with increased age, lower extremity arterial disease, systolic blood pressure, and ultrasonographically measured carotid artery stiffness. CONCLUSIONS Men with low levels of HDL-C and CHD but without elevated LDL-C or total cholesterol have a very high prevalence of ultrasound-detected carotid artery atherosclerosis.
Journal of Lipid Research | 2010
Gina M. Peloso; Serkalem Demissie; Dorothea Collins; Daniel B. Mirel; Stacey Gabriel; L. Adrienne Cupples; Sander J. Robins; Ernst J. Schaefer; Margaret E. Brousseau
A low level of HDL-C is the most common plasma lipid abnormality observed in men with established coronary heart disease (CHD). To identify allelic variants associated with susceptibility to low HDL-C and CHD, we examined 60 candidate genes with key roles in HDL metabolism, insulin resistance, and inflammation using samples from the Veterans Affairs HDL Intervention Trial (VA-HIT; cases, n = 699) and the Framingham Offspring Study (FOS; controls, n = 705). VA-HIT was designed to examine the benefits of HDL-raising with gemfibrozil in men with low HDL-C (≤40 mg/dl) and established CHD. After adjustment for multiple testing within each gene, single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) significantly associated with case status were identified in the genes encoding LIPC (rs4775065, P < 0.0001); CETP (rs5882, P = 0.0002); RXRA (rs11185660, P = 0.0021); ABCA1 (rs2249891, P = 0.0126); ABCC6 (rs150468, P = 0.0206; rs212077, P = 0.0443); CUBN (rs7893395, P = 0.0246); APOA2 (rs3813627, P = 0.0324); SELP (rs732314, P = 0.0376); and APOC4 (rs10413089, P = 0.0425). Included among the novel findings of this study are the identification of susceptibility alleles for low HDL-C/CHD risk in the genes encoding CUBN and RXRA, and the observation that genetic variation in SELP may influence CHD risk through its effects on HDL.