Unit Converter
Apolipoprotein B (ApoB)

SI UNITS (recommended)

CONVENTIONAL UNITS

(Primary Atherogenic Apolipoprotein - LDL Particle Number Marker)

Synonyms

  • ApoB
  • Apolipoprotein B-100
  • ApoB100
  • LDL apoprotein
  • ApoB-containing lipoprotein marker
  • Atherogenic lipoprotein index

Units of Measurement

mmol/L, µmol/L, g/L, mg/dL, mg/100mL, mg%, mg/mL

Description

Apolipoprotein B (ApoB) is the primary structural protein of all atherogenic lipoproteins:

  • LDL
  • VLDL
  • IDL
  • Lipoprotein(a)
  • Chylomicron remnants

Each atherogenic particle contains exactly 1 ApoB molecule
ApoB directly reflects the number of atherogenic particles, unlike LDL-C, which reflects the cholesterol content of those particles.

ApoB is one of the strongest predictors of cardiovascular disease (CVD) and is now recommended as a primary risk marker in major lipid guidelines.

Physiological Role

1. Lipoprotein Assembly

ApoB-100 (liver) and ApoB-48 (intestine) stabilize lipoproteins.

2. Atherogenesis

ApoB particles penetrate arterial walls → promote plaque formation.

3. LDL Receptor Binding

ApoB-100 binds LDL receptors to mediate uptake.

Clinical Significance

High ApoB (Most Important)

Indicates high atherogenic particle number, even if LDL-C is normal.

Conditions:

  • Atherosclerosis / CAD
  • Familial hypercholesterolemia
  • Metabolic syndrome
  • Type 2 diabetes
  • Mixed dyslipidemia (high TG + high ApoB)
  • Hypothyroidism
  • Nephrotic syndrome

High ApoB reflects small dense LDL particles, which are highly atherogenic.

Low ApoB

Seen in:

  • Malnutrition
  • Hyperthyroidism
  • Severe liver disease
  • Abetalipoproteinemia (rare)
  • MTP deficiency

Reference Intervals

Adult Reference Ranges

SexApoB (g/L)mg/dLInterpretation
Men0.60 – 1.20 g/L60 – 120 mg/dLNormal
Women0.55 – 1.15 g/L55 – 115 mg/dLNormal

Cardiovascular Risk Thresholds

  • Optimal ApoB: < 0.80 g/L (80 mg/dL)
  • High risk: > 1.00 g/L (100 mg/dL)
  • Very high risk: > 1.20 g/L (120 mg/dL)
  • Extreme (FH): > 1.40 g/L (140 mg/dL)

Therapeutic Targets (AHA/ACC + ESC/EAS)

  • Primary prevention: < 0.90 g/L
  • High risk: < 0.80 g/L
  • Very high risk: < 0.70 g/L
  • Diabetes/insulin resistance: < 0.80 g/L

Unit Meanings

UnitMeaning
mmol/Lmillimole per liter
µmol/Lmicromole per liter
g/Lgrams per liter
mg/dLmilligrams per deciliter
mg/100mLmg%
mg%mg per 100 mL
mg/mLmilligrams per milliliter

ApoB vs LDL-C — Why ApoB Is Superior

ParameterApoBLDL-C
MeasuresParticle numberCholesterol content
Predicts ASCVD better
Unaffected by TG/insulin resistance
Better in metabolic syndrome
Direct measurementCalculated
Useful when LDL-C appears normal

If ApoB is high, ASCVD risk is high - even with normal LDL-C.

Diagnostic Uses

1. ASCVD Risk Assessment

Best predictor when:

  • TG high
  • LDL-C normal (discordance)
  • Diabetes / metabolic syndrome

2. Monitoring Lipid-Lowering Therapy

Tracks response to:

  • Statins
  • PCSK9 inhibitors
  • Ezetimibe
  • Fibrates (if TG high)

3. ApoB/ApoA-1 Ratio

ApoB/ApoA-1 Ratio=Best global atherogenic index\text{ApoB/ApoA-1 Ratio} = \text{Best global atherogenic index}ApoB/ApoA-1 Ratio=Best global atherogenic index

  • < 0.6: Low risk
  • 0.6–0.8: Moderate
  • > 0.8: High risk

4. Genetic Dyslipidemia

  • Familial hypercholesterolemia
  • Familial combined hyperlipidemia

5. Non-HDL-C Discordance Cases

ApoB resolves diagnostic uncertainty.

Analytical Notes

  • Measured via immunonephelometry or immunoturbidimetry
  • Fasting sample recommended in hypertriglyceridemia
  • Inflammatory conditions may reduce ApoB slightly
  • Stable across day-to-day variability

Clinical Pearls

  • ApoB is a better predictor of MI than LDL cholesterol.
  • Always check ApoB in diabetes, metabolic syndrome, high TG.
  • ApoB remains elevated when LDL-C looks normal due to small-dense LDL.
  • ApoB is the single most accurate blood marker of atherogenic burden.
  • ApoB-guided therapy prevents undertreatment of high-risk patients.

Interesting Fact

Each atherogenic particle carries one ApoB protein, so ApoB is essentially a lipoprotein particle count, something LDL-C cannot provide.

References

  1. Tietz Clinical Chemistry & Molecular Diagnostics, 8th Edition - Lipids & Apolipoproteins.
  2. IFCC - Apolipoprotein Standardization Working Group.
  3. AHA/ACC 2018-2022 Cholesterol Guidelines.
  4. ESC/EAS 2019 Dyslipidemia Guidelines.
  5. Mayo Clinic Laboratories - ApoB Test.
  6. ARUP Consult - Lipid Disorders & Apo Testing.
  7. NIH / MedlinePlus - ApoB Overview.
  8. Clinical Lipidology & CVD Prevention Articles.

Last updated: January 26, 2026

Reviewed by : Medical Review Board

Change language

Other Convertors