Background: Serum C3 is an inflammatory predictor of myocardial infarction and a covariate of fasting insulin and several endogenous risk factors. This study was performed to ascertain whether risk factor control may reduce elevated C3 concentrations.
Methods: After traditional risk factor and C3 assessment in 1100 unselected men aged 55-64 years, 238 men with persistently elevated C3 levels (>=1.19 g/l, high tertile) were randomised into 2 groups: 43 controls, who were referred to their general practitioner, and 195 subjects who were intensively treated with diet, and anti-hypertensive or antidiabetic drugs according to specific indications, without anti-dyslipidemic drugs.
Results: After three months in the treated subjects significant decrements of body weight, blood pressure, blood glucose and serum lipids were obtained, with stable C3 levels (while in controls a 3.3% increase occurred, P=0.02). The factors associated with a C3 decrement >5% were a high baseline C3 level, a recent acute inflammation, physical activity, belonging to the treated group, and a significant reduction in body weight, triglycerides or blood glucose. However, in multivariate analysis only an elevated baseline C3 (P<0.0001), a weight loss >2% (P=0.0009) and physical activity (P=0.02) remained independently associated with a C3 decrement >5% (R(2)=0.14).
Conclusions: Only weight loss and physical activity, but not traditional risk factor lowering, could independently induce a significant C3 decrease. Thus, C3 elevation is associated with, but probably not caused by, traditional risk factors.