Abstract. The predictive value of serum lipoprotein concentrations at birth for the same parameters later in life is under debate. A group of 20 children displaying high total cholesterol (TC) levels at birth (group 2) were compared at age 4 years with 18 control children who had presented a normal lipoprotein profile at birth (group 1). There was a significant correlation between TC, low density lipoprotein-cholesterol, high density lipoprotein (HDL)-cholesterol, and apolipoprotein (Apo) A-I levels at age 4 years and at birth. The increases in TC and HDL-cholesterol levels from birth to age 4 years were significantly lower (P0.05, P0.01, respectively) in group 2 than in the control group and inversely correlated with the concentrations of these parameters at birth. The increases in HDL-cholesterol and Apo A-I levels were higher in males while those of triacylglycerol and Apo B were higher in females (P0.05). However, the increases in TC and HDL-cholesterol were higher in controls (P0.05). Diets of children of both groups were similar regarding the energy contribution of saturated, monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fatty acids, although children from group 2 ate less fish and -3 fatty acids (P0.05). Conclusion: the present data suggest for the first time that when high density lipoprotein-cholesterol levels are high at birth, those levels increase less during the first four years of life. Moreover, low density lipoprotein-cholesterol increased about five times as much as high density lipoprotein-cholesterol did in controls and about 15 times as much as in the children with high cholesterol at birth.