Journal of Clinical Medicine (Sep 2023)

The TG/HDL-c Lipid Ratio as a Cardiovascular Risk Marker in a Mexican Urban Middle-Class Population: Do We Need a Risk Score Tailored for Mexicans?

  • Yolanda Martínez-Marroquín,
  • Alejandra Meaney,
  • Virginia Samaniego-Méndez,
  • Nayelli Nájera,
  • Guillermo Ceballos,
  • Carlos Fernández-Barros,
  • Eduardo Meaney

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12186005
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 18
p. 6005

Abstract

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Introduction: Risk scores are essential in primary prevention to detect high-risk patients. The most common scores exclude hypertriglyceridemia and abdominal obesity in their risk assessment. We examined the triglyceride/HDL-cholesterol (TG/HDL-c) ratio as a cardiovascular (CV) risk marker in a middle-class urban Mexican population sample. Aim: Our aim was to test the concept of a scoring system reflecting Mexican population characteristics. Methods: A total of 2602 healthy adults from the Lindavista primary prevention program were considered, evaluating gender, age, blood pressure, smoking, body mass index, waist circumference, lipid profile, and fasting glucose. According to the abnormality, a score from −3 to +3 was assigned. Results: The summation of eleven variables yielded the Lindavista score (LS), which was calibrated versus the TG/HDL ratio and ACC ASCVD Risk Estimator Plus score to determine its correlation with risk categories. The TG/HDL-c ratio had a linear correlation with LS and high-risk ACC ASCVD categories. Conclusions: Compared with LS and TG/HDL-c, the ACC ASCVD system underestimates the high-risk category. The high prevalence of obesity and lipid triad in the Mexican population requires a scale that considers those traits. The TG/HDL-c ratio is a practical, easy, and economical instrument to categorize risk in Mexicans.

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