“…Since lipoprotein concentrations change in an orchestrated fashion, the patterns of associations between lipoprotein fractions can be considered, to some extent, related to the underlying structure of the biological networks [ 20 ]. Differences in lipoprotein associations which are sex- and age-related can indeed point to affected molecular mechanisms since changes can be more significant than levels alone [ 21 , 22 ], as shown in applications to health, sex, and age phenotyping [ 17 , 23 ], cardiovascular risk [ 24 , 25 , 26 ], and bacterial infections [ 27 , 28 ].…”