The formation of a fibrin clot is one of the key events in atherothrombotic vascular diseases, such as myocardial infarction, ischemic stroke and peripheral arterial disease. Fibrin is formed from a circulating precursor, fibrinogen, by the action of thrombin. Both genetic and environmental factors are important determinants of the circulating fibrinogen levels. Epidemiologic studies have demonstrated a role for this hemostatic protein in the prediction of cardiovascular disease. As an acute-phase reactant, fibrinogen is also a marker of inflammation. Likewise, recent studies from our group have shown that increased fibrinogen levels represent a marker of subclinical atherosclerosis, likely to be useful in the identification of asymptomatic subjects at risk for cardiovascular disease.