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Human Blood Lipoprotein Predictions from 1 H NMR Spectra: Protocol, Model Performances, and Cage of Covariance.

Bekzod KhakimovHuub C J HoefslootNabiollah MobarakiVioletta AruMette KristensenMads V LindLars HolmJosué L Castro-MejíaDennis S NielsenDoris M JacobsAge K SmildeSøren Balling Engelsen
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2021)
Lipoprotein subfractions are biomarkers for the early diagnosis of cardiovascular diseases. The reference method, ultracentrifugation, for measuring lipoproteins is time-consuming, and there is a need to develop a rapid method for cohort screenings. This study presents partial least-squares regression models developed using 1 H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra and concentrations of lipoproteins as measured by ultracentrifugation on 316 healthy Danes. This study explores, for the first time, different regions of the 1 H NMR spectrum representing signals of molecules in lipoprotein particles and different lipid species to develop parsimonious, reliable, and optimal prediction models. A total of 65 lipoprotein main and subfractions were predictable with high accuracy, Q 2 of >0.6, using an optimal spectral region (1.4-0.6 ppm) containing methylene and methyl signals from lipids. The models were subsequently tested on an independent cohort of 290 healthy Swedes with predicted and reference values matching by up to 85-95%. In addition, an open software tool was developed to predict lipoproteins concentrations in human blood from standardized 1 H NMR spectral recordings.
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