Lipid Management Coaching
aka Lipid coaching protocol, ApoB coaching protocol
Status Active — coaching guidance; ⚠️ all specific therapeutic recommendations require human review
TL;DR
Lipid management coaching in Vitals centers on making the most of user-input lipid panel data to identify hidden atherogenic particle burden. The highest-value scenario is the patient with “normal LDL-C” but elevated TG/HDL-C ratio — a pattern common in metabolic syndrome and insulin resistance where LDL-C underestimates total particle count. Vitals cannot measure ApoB directly; coaching focuses on non-HDL-C calculation, TG/HDL-C ratio flagging, and realistic framing of lifestyle vs. pharmacotherapy options. All specific numeric target recommendations require prescriber/medical reviewer signoff.
Core Coaching Framework
What Vitals CAN do
- Prompt users to input periodic lipid panel data (Total Cholesterol, HDL-C, LDL-C, Triglycerides)
- Auto-calculate non-HDL-C = Total Cholesterol − HDL-C
- Flag non-HDL-C against ESC/EAS 2019 risk-based targets
- Auto-calculate TG/HDL-C ratio and flag thresholds (men >3.5, women >2.5)
- Frame metabolic context: weight, activity, glucose trends where available
- Educate on LDL-C vs. particle count distinction
What Vitals CANNOT do
- Measure ApoB directly (hard constraint — requires plasma immunoassay)
- Replace lipid panel data with wearable-only inference
- Make specific therapeutic recommendations without human review
- Use CGM data as a validated ApoB proxy (CGM → ApoB is experimental, not validated)
Coaching Decision Flow
Trigger: User inputs lipid panel
Step 1: Calculate non-HDL-C = TC − HDL-C
Flag against ESC/EAS target for user's risk category
Step 2: Calculate TG/HDL-C ratio
Flag if men >3.5 or women >2.5
Step 3: Generate composite coaching nudge
Decision tree
If non-HDL-C at goal AND TG/HDL ratio normal: → Reinforce maintenance. Prompt annual lipid panel recheck.
If non-HDL-C at goal BUT TG/HDL ratio elevated: → “Your LDL-C may look normal, but your TG/HDL ratio suggests elevated VLDL-ApoB burden. Ask your clinician about ApoB testing or non-HDL-C as your tracking metric. Mediterranean diet, exercise, and weight management can help address this pattern.”
If non-HDL-C above goal: → “Your non-HDL-C is above target for your risk category. Discuss additional lipid management options with your clinician. If you’re already on statin therapy, options may include increasing statin intensity, adding ezetimibe, or considering a PCSK9 inhibitor for high-risk patients.”
Coaching Scenario Protocols
Scenario 1: Normal LDL-C, High TG/HDL Ratio
Profile: LDL-C at goal, TG/HDL-C ratio >3.5 (men) or >2.5 (women). May have metabolic syndrome, NAFLD, or prediabetes.
Coaching approach:
- Explain that LDL-C measures cholesterol mass inside particles; ApoB counts particles — when TG is high, VLDL carries more ApoB than LDL-C reflects
- Explain that “normal LDL-C” may be masking elevated total atherogenic particle number
- Recommend non-HDL-C calculation as the immediate next step (can be done from current lipid panel)
- Encourage asking their clinician about ApoB measurement
- Connect to lifestyle: Mediterranean diet, weight loss, and aerobic exercise all reduce VLDL-ApoB production
⚠️ Human signoff required for specific numeric target recommendations.
Scenario 2: Statin-Intolerant Patient
Profile: Reports muscle symptoms on statins; LDL-C or ApoB not at goal.
Coaching approach:
- Validate that statin-associated muscle symptoms (SAMS) are real — not psychological
- Do NOT advise stopping medication without prescriber involvement
- Statin rechallenge with a different statin or lower dose is worth discussing with prescriber
- Discuss bempedoic acid (oral, liver-activated, no muscle side effects) — supported by CLEAR Outcomes trial
- Inclisiran (twice-yearly subcutaneous injection) addresses injection burden of PCSK9 monoclonal antibodies — discuss with prescriber
- Reinforce lifestyle as essential support but unlikely to replace pharmacotherapy at high-risk ApoB levels
⚠️ Human signoff required for any medication switching or initiation discussion.
Scenario 3: PCSK9 Inhibitor Patient
Profile: On evolocumab or alirocumab; wants to track progress.
Coaching approach:
- Explain PCSK9 inhibitors are the most potent ApoB-lowering therapy available (~50–60% ApoB reduction)
- Expected: ApoB typically falls to 50–65 mg/dL range from baseline of 100–120 mg/dL
- Connecting medication to lab-based non-HDL-C trends reinforces adherence
- Inclisiran (twice-yearly) is an alternative if injection frequency is a barrier — discuss with prescriber
- Flag very low ApoB (<40 mg/dL) as a monitoring scenario — no immediate concern at 5 years, but long-term data still accumulating
⚠️ Human signoff required for PCSK9 therapy adherence guidance.
Scenario 4: Type 2 Diabetes with Lipid Panel
Profile: T2D patient on statin; LDL-C at goal; TG and/or TG/HDL ratio elevated.
Coaching approach:
- Diabetic patients often have “normal LDL-C” but elevated ApoB due to VLDL overproduction from insulin resistance
- Non-HDL-C <100 mg/dL is the ADA goal (not just LDL-C <100 mg/dL) — coach toward this
- If TG >200 mg/dL and HDL low: high-TG metabolic syndrome subgroup is where fibrate add-on may provide benefit (ACCORD Lipid subgroup); however, PROMINENT failure means fibrate add-on is not routinely recommended for all T2D patients
- Icosapent ethyl (4 g/day) is an option for high-TG statin-treated diabetics per REDUCE-IT; modest ApoB reduction (~5–10%) primarily via TG lowering
- GLP-1 agonists (semaglutide, tirzepatide) provide moderate ApoB lowering via weight loss and improved insulin sensitivity — additional benefit beyond glucose control
⚠️ Human signoff required for any specific therapeutic recommendations for diabetic patients.
Lifestyle Intervention Context
| Intervention | ApoB Reduction | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mediterranean diet | ~5–10% | Best-evidenced dietary pattern for lipids |
| Weight loss (5–10 kg) | ~5–15% | Most potent lifestyle component |
| Aerobic exercise | ~2–8% | Modest but real |
| Smoking cessation | Reported | Lowers ApoB independent of BMI |
⚠️ Lifestyle interventions alone rarely achieve ApoB <60 mg/dL in high-risk patients without pharmacotherapy. Set realistic expectations. Present lifestyle as essential pharmacotherapy support, not a substitute for it.
⚠️ Human signoff required for diet/exercise prescriptions beyond general guidance.
Supplement Overclaiming
⚠️ Coaches must explicitly counter supplement overclaiming:
- Red yeast rice: Contains statin-like monacolins; adds statin-like risk without the evidence base of prescription statins
- Berberine: Modest lipid effects in small studies; no RCT hard-outcome data for ApoB-specific CV risk reduction
- Plant sterols: Reduce LDL-C modestly; no meaningful ApoB outcome data
- Omega-3 supplements: Lower TG; ApoB reduction is modest and inconsistent
Guidance: No RCT evidence supports any supplement for ApoB-specific cardiovascular risk reduction. Recommend against using supplements as a substitute for evidence-based pharmacotherapy in high-risk patients.
Safety Flags for Human Review
| Flag | Clinical Action |
|---|---|
| TG/HDL elevated + normal LDL-C | Prompt non-HDL-C; flag for ApoB discussion |
| SAMS (statin muscle symptoms) | CK testing; statin rechallenge discussion |
| Gemfibrozil use + statin | Contraindicated; switch to fenofibrate |
| Very low ApoB (<40 mg/dL) | Monitoring scenario; flag to prescriber |
| ApoB >130 mg/dL despite statin | Discuss additional therapy with prescriber |
| Lp(a) not yet measured | Flag for dedicated Lp(a) testing |
⚠️ All coaching nudges generated from these algorithms require human review by a qualified healthcare provider before production deployment.
Related Notes
- ApoB Lipoprotein Coaching — hub note
- ApoB Particle Number Principle — mechanism note
- Cardiovascular risk — risk domain
- Berberine — coaches should know its ApoB evidence is weak
- PCSK9 Inhibition — aspirational