Abstract
Background. Little is known about the degree to which behavioural, biological, and genetic traits contribute to within-person variation in serum cholesterol. Materials and Methods. The authors studied within-person variation in serum total and high density lipoprotein (HDL) cholesterol in 458 participants of 27 dietary intervention studies in Wageningen, The Netherlands, from 1976 to 1995. Results. For a median of 4 days between blood draws, the geometric mean of the within-person standard deviation was 0.13 mmol/l (∼5 mg/dl, coefficient of variation = 3.0%) for total cholesterol and 0.04 mmol/l (∼1.5 mg/dl, coefficient of variation = 3.0%) for HDL cholesterol. In mixed-model linear regressions using within-person variance as the dependent variable and including lipid concentration and covariates listed below, within-person variance of both total cholesterol and HDL cholesterol was higher for greater number of days between blood draws and for self-selected diet rather than investigator-controlled diet. Within-person variance of total cholesterol only was higher for non-standardized versus standardized phlebotomy protocol and for female sex. The authors found evidence that the APOA4 -347 (12/22 genotype) and MTP -493 (11 genotype) polymorphisms may increase the within-person variation in total cholesterol. Conclusion. Under certain study design (self-selected diet, use of non-standardized phlebotomy protocol) or participant characteristics (female, certain polymorphisms) within-person lipid variance is increased and required sample size will be greater. These findings may have important implications for the time and cost of such interventions. © International Epidemiological Association 2004; all rights reserved.
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Pereira, M. A., Weggemans, R. M., Jacobs, D. R., Hannan, P. J., Zock, P. L., Ordovas, J. M., & Katan, M. B. (2004). Within-person variation in serum lipids: Implications for clinical trials. International Journal of Epidemiology, 33(3), 534–541. https://doi.org/10.1093/ije/dyh057
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