To assess your risk of developing cardiovascular disease (heart disease, stroke and related diseases); to monitor treatment
Lipid Profile
Between ages 40 and 75 years as part of a routine cardiovascular health check, or if you are already thought to be at risk of cardiovascular disease for another reason, or if you are starting on or taking lipid-modifying treatments (e.g. statins).
Testing for your lipid profile reequires a blood sample. Most often, the blood sample is collected by venepuncture (using a needle to collect blood from a vein in the arm). Occasionally a fingerprick test can be used, although this is not commonly available in GP practices or hospitals in the UK.
Before 2014, fasting samples were used for a lipid profile, but since then fasting is no longer routinely required. However, fasting may still be needed in some circumstances, so you should follow your doctor's advice.
-
How is it used?
1) As part of a cardiovascular risk assessment
Cardiovascular disease means disease of the heart, such as a heart attack, or of the arteries. These conditions are partly due to laying down of excess cholesterol in the artery walls (known as atherosclerosis, or “furring up of the arteries”). The balance of different cholesterol fractions measured as part of the lipid profile (e.g. "bad" non-HDL-C vs "good" HDL-C) can influence how fast and extensive this process is. Therefore, the commonest reason to measure a person’s lipid profile is to help estimate their risk of developing cardiovascular disease in the future. This then helps with decisions about lifestyle changes and medical treatments to reduce future risk. In the UK, most doctors use a “risk calculator” (QRISK2 or QRISK3) which uses the cholesterol: HDL ratio along with other known risk factors (such as age, gender, smoking, blood pressure, diabetes, obesity, and certain chronic illnesses) for this purpose.
2) In cases of pancreatitis
Pancreatitis is a serious medical condition in which the pancreas becomes inflamed. It has many causes, one of which is high levels of triglycerides in the blood. Therefore, if you ever develop pancreatitis, your lipid profile would usually be checked to look for elevated triglycerides. If found, these can be reduced effectively by lifestyle changes and medical treatments.
3) To monitor response to treatment
If you are prescribed lipid-modifying treatments, for example to reduce risk of cardiovascular disease or pancreatitis, your lipid profile may be checked periodically to determine if the treatment is working adequately. -
When is it requested?
- In the UK, your lipid profile is commonly tested by your GP when you reach the age of 40, as part of a routine cardiovascular health check.
- It may be checked at other times if you are thought to be at increased risk of cardiovascular disease for another reason.
- It will be checked if you develop another medical condition which can be due to abnormal lipids, such as pancreatitis.
- If you have a close relative with inherited high cholesterol (familial hypercholesterolaemia).
- Finally, it will likely be checked at regular intervals if you have been prescribed lipid-modifying treatments, such as statins.
-
What does the test result mean?
Please see the separate pages on each component of the lipid profile for discussions about each component of the lipid profile - cholesterol, non-HDL, HDL, triglycerides, LDL
Ideal levels for adults are as follows:
Total cholesterol: below 5.0 mmol/L
Non-HDL cholesterol: below 4.0 mmol/L
LDL cholesterol: below 3.0 mmol/L
HDL cholesterol: above 1.0 mmol/L for a man, above 1.2 mmol/L for a woman
TC: HDL ratio above 6 is considered high risk - the lower this ratio is the better
Triglycerides: below 1.7 mmol/L after fasting or below 2.3 mmol/L without fasting
-
Is there anything else I should know?
A lipid profile should ideally be measured when a person is healthy. In particular, cholesterol can be temporarily low during acute illness, immediately following a heart attack, or during stress (like from surgery or an accident). To get a true representation of your cholesterol, you should wait at least six weeks after any illness before having it measured. In women, cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations are high during pregnancy. Women should wait at least three months after the baby is born to have a lipid profile measured. Some drugs are known to affect the lipid profile, including oral corticosteroids, beta blockers, oral contraceptives, thiazide diuretics, oral retinoids and phenytoin.
-
I am used to getting an LDL-C result, but this no longer appears as part of my lipid profile. Why?