Drugs commonly used to treat high blood pressure, and prevent heart attacks and strokes, are associated with significantly worse cardiovascular outcomes in hypertensive African Americans compared to whites, according to a new comparative effectiveness research study led by researchers in the Department of Population Health at NYU Langone Medical Center. Show
The study, published on September 15 in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology (JACC), is unique, the authors say, in that it evaluates racial differences in cardiovascular outcomes and mortality between hypertensive black and white patients whose treatment was initiated with angiotensin-converting-enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, outside of a clinical trial. ACE inhibitors are one of several classes of drugs commonly prescribed to individuals with hypertension to prevent deaths, heart attack, kidney failure, heart failure, and stroke. Evidence from randomized controlled trials has previously indicated that ACE inhibitors may not provide the same benefits in blacks compared to whites. However, blacks have been largely underrepresented in the majority of these studies, despite the fact they have disproportionately higher rates of hypertension-related morbidity and mortality than other racial and ethnic groups, according to study authors. “We know what works in clinical trials. But when you go into the real world clinical practice setting, physicians don’t often translate that evidence into practice. This is the first study that looks at this issue in a real-world, clinical practice setting,” says Gbenga Ogedegbe, MD, MPH, lead author of the study and a professor in the Department of Population Health at NYU Langone. Data for the study came from electronic health records of nearly 60,000 patients who have high blood pressure and received care between 2004-2009 within New York City’s Health and Hospital Corporation (HHC). HHC operates all public hospitals and clinics in New York City and is the largest such institution in the country. Approximately 35 percent of patients seen in the HHC system are African American. The investigators compared rates of all-cause mortality, heart attack, stroke, and congestive heart failure between African American and white patients who were prescribed one of four classes of antihypertensive drugs to treat high blood pressure: ACE inhibitors, beta blockers, calcium-channel blockers, or thiazide-type diuretics. In African Americans, ACE inhibitor use was associated with a statistically significant rate of poorer cardiovascular outcomes (8.7 percent compared to 7.7 percent) but not in whites (6.4 percent compared to 6.74 percent). African Americans were no more likely than whites to have adverse effects linked to use of ACE inhibitors. The reasons for the noted racial disparity in clinical effectiveness of ACE inhibitor-based regimes between African Americans and whites remain unclear, though the prevailing theory is that blacks are less responsive to antihypertensive treatment with ACE inhibitors. African Americans are also at greater risk for cardiovascular events than whites. “The results of this study adds to a growing consensus among physicians that treatment of hypertension in blacks should not be initiated with ACE inhibitors,” said Dr. Ogedegbe, director of Division of Health & Behavior and NYU’s Center for Healthful Behavior Change. In January, the Joint National Committee recommended initiating other treatments besides ACE inhibitors in patients of African descent, and there are other guidelines in preparation that can be informed by this study, Dr. Ogedegbe noted. Additional authors of the study include other NYU Langone researchers Sripal Bangalore, MD, and Keith Goldfeld, DrPH. Dr. Ogedegbe was supported by a grant from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, K24HL111315, in addition to the AHRQ grant R01HS018589. All other authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose. The AHRQ did not have any role in the design and conduct of the study, in the collection, analysis, and interpretation of the data, or in the preparation, review, or approval of this manuscript. Media InquiriesAllison Clair AbstractDespite the large differences in the epidemiology of hypertension across Europe, treatment strategies are similar for national populations of white European descent. However, hypertensive patients of African or South Asian ethnicity may require ethnic-specific approaches, as these population subgroups tend to have higher blood pressure at an earlier age that is more difficult to control, a higher occurrence of diabetes, and more target organ damage with earlier cardiovascular mortality. Therefore, we systematically reviewed the evidence on antihypertensive drug treatment in South Asian and African ethnicity patients. We used the Cochrane systematic review methodology to retrieve trials in electronic databases including CENTRAL, PubMed, and Embase from their inception through November 2015; and with handsearch. We retrieved 4596 reports that yielded 35 trials with 7 classes of antihypertensive drugs in 25,540 African ethnicity patients. Aside from the well-known blood pressure efficacy of calcium channel blockers and diuretics, with lesser effect of ACE inhibitors and beta-blockers, nebivolol was not more effective than placebo in reducing systolic blood pressure levels. Trials with morbidity and mortality outcomes indicated that lisinopril and losartan-based therapy were associated with a greater incidence of stroke and sudden death. Furthermore, 1581 reports yielded 16 randomized controlled trials with blood pressure outcomes in 1719 South Asian hypertensive patients. In contrast with the studies in African ethnicity patients, there were no significant differences in blood pressure lowering efficacy between drugs, and no trials available with mortality outcomes. In conclusion, in patients of African ethnicity, treatment initiated with ACE inhibitor or angiotensin II receptor blocker monotherapy was associated with adverse cardiovascular outcomes. We found no evidence of different efficacy of antihypertensive drugs in South Asians, but there is a need for trials with morbidity and mortality outcomes. Screening for cardiovascular risk at a younger age, treating hypertension at lower thresholds, and new delivery models to find, treat and follow hypertensives in the community may help reduce the excess cardiovascular mortality in these high-risk groups. BackgroundThe increasing ethnic diversity of the European population is likely to bring a greater diversity in disease and disease patterns to the doctor’s office. Around 33 million immigrants live in the European Union. It is estimated that a third of these immigrants are from other European countries, while immigrants from non-European countries are mainly African (25 %, with more than half North-African), or Asian (21 %) [1]. Despite the large differences in the epidemiology of hypertension across Europe [2], treatment strategies tend to be similar for national populations of white European descent. Nevertheless, in particular patients of South Asian and sub-Saharan African descent tend to have more hypertension and diabetes, and more target organ damage and cardiovascular mortality at a younger age than patients of white European descent. In addition, hypertension occurs earlier in life in these patients groups, bringing about a faster progression from normotension to hypertension, with higher mean blood pressures than in white patients [3–22]. While little is reported regarding the pathophysiology of hypertension in South Asian patients, abundant data in patients of African descent indicate there is greater salt sensitivity, blunted nocturnal dipping, and enhanced vasoconstriction in this group [3–8, 10, 12–14, 16–21]. South Asians are genetically diverse, but members of this population subgroup share a high cardiovascular risk, with more severe atherosclerosis reported, and ischaemic end organ damage at a younger age even with lower cholesterol levels than in whites [11]. Thus, hypertension seems to be a more aggressive disease, occurring at a younger age in these patient groups. This could have important implications for hypertension screening and management. In patients of all ethnicity groups, non-pharmacological intervention to reduce hypertension and cardiovascular risk, including dietary adjustments, physical exercise, weight reduction, smoking cessation, and reduction of excessive alcohol intake should be part of hypertension management. In addition, stress reduction and relaxation exercise might aid in reducing blood pressure [23]. In particular, diets high in potassium and calcium and low in sodium, such as the (DASH) diet, have documented blood pressure lowering efficacy [24–30]. These measures are thought to be effective in hypertensives across ethnic groups, but increasing evidence indicates that the very low salt intake (<1500 mg or <65 mmol sodium per day) recommended for persons of African ethnicity [31–33], has been associated with increased mortality in this group, potentially related to activation of the renin angiotensin system [31, 32]. Even so, high salt intake (>2300 mg or >100 mmol sodium per day) is still considered detrimental to cardiovascular health [32], and moderate salt restriction continues to have a place in the management of hypertension in all ethnic groups. However, most patients with hypertension will need drug therapy aside life style measures. Therefore, in this paper, we review the evidence on randomized trials of antihypertensive drug treatment in African and South Asian ethnicity patients, and propose practical approaches for the European situation. MethodsThe participation of patients of ethnic minority groups in major, international clinical trials is generally too low to calculate the primary outcome with sufficient power [34]. Therefore, we systematically reviewed the evidence on the efficacy of antihypertensive drug therapy to reduce blood pressure and morbidity and mortality outcomes, and pooled the existing data. Systematic searches were conducted in November 2015, with our previous systematic review on patients of African ethnicity [16, 17] updated and expanded. In brief, we used the Cochrane systematic review methodology, [35] and defined a highly sensitive search strategy to retrieve original reports of randomized controlled trials in hypertensive African and South Asian ethnicity patients, providing original quantitative data on the effect of antihypertensive monotherapy on blood pressure (trial duration at least 2 weeks) vs concurrent placebo treatment, or antihypertensive mono or combination therapy on morbidity or mortality outcomes (trial duration at least 1 year). We included only trials with major drug classes in adults, men and non-pregnant women, with uncomplicated primary hypertension (no history of, or current cardiovascular events or ESRD). Trials that considered oral antihypertensive treatment with thiazide and thiazide-like diuretics, calcium-channel blockers, centrally acting agents, peripheral adrenergic neuron antagonists, angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitors, or angiotensin II receptor blockers were eligible for inclusion. We conducted separate searches and data analysis for these two ethnic groups. Searches were performed in electronic databases (Embase, PubMed, Cochrane Library CENTRAL, Literatura Latino-Americana y del Caribe en Ciencias de la Salud (LILACS), African Index Medicus, and for South Asian patients, IndMED) from their inception through November 2015, without language restriction. These databases have different software and therefore different search languages, but a typical search strategy for trials in patients of African ethnicity was, “(Black* OR Afri* OR AFRO* OR Creole OR Carribean OR Caribbean OR negr* OR ethnic* OR blacks) AND (hypertension OR antihypertensive) AND randomized”; and for South Asians: the first step was “(South Asian OR South Asians OR India OR Indian OR Hindustani OR Bangladesh OR Nepal OR Sri Lanka OR Ceylon OR Pakistan)”. Search yields from all databases were considered and analysed separately to prevent merging errors and to enhance trial retrieval. Furthermore, we contacted experts and performed hand search. We did not include trials in diabetics only, with experimental drugs, or with complementary medicines. We used data extraction forms to collect trial data. With pilot searches, we retrieved very few placebo controlled trials in South Asians, and decided to review drug vs drug trials in this group. For drug vs drug trials with multiple treatment arms, we followed the Cochrane handbook methodology and combined the comparison groups into one group of “other drugs” [35]. African or South Asian descent (ancestry, or ethnicity) were defined as respectively of sub-Saharan African descent, or Indian subcontinental descent as indicated by the authors. We included only randomized controlled trials, and methodological quality was further assessed using the Jadad score, based on the description of randomization, blinding, and accountability of all patients, including withdrawals in each of the study groups, and the underlying reasons. Subgroups were based on gender and geographical location, and compliance data were assessed in trials with mortality outcomes. Statistical analysisQuantitative analysis of outcomes was based on intention-to-treat results (primary) and per protocol analysis (secondary). We included data from the first part of crossover studies when such data were available; if not, we included the data these studies provided. Our measure of effect for each study was difference in means (in mmHg) for systemic arterial blood pressure (continuous measure) and relative risk (RR) for dichotomous data. In addition, we calculated achievement of target diastolic blood pressure (DBP <90 mmHg, or reduction of ≥10 mmHg, or ≥10 %, as defined by the author) as the weighted mean of placebo-corrected results per drug class, or in South Asians, vs other drug types. Missing standard deviations were imputed per drug class. We clinically assessed studies for heterogeneity in patient characteristics, interventions, and outcomes, to decide whether studies should be pooled. Furthermore, we used I 2 statistics to quantify the proportion of total variation in the estimates of treatment effect that was due to heterogeneity. We planned to not aggregate results with a high variation across studies (I 2 ≥ 75 %) [17, 35]. When we aggregated studies, we conservatively used the random effects model to estimate the average intervention effect. Data in square brackets are 95 % confidence intervals, unless indicated otherwise. We used Review Manager (RevMan) software, version 5 (Cochrane Collaboration, Oxford, UK) for the analyses. ResultsPatients of African ethnicityFull reports or abstracts from 4596 references of papers yielded 35 trials with 7 classes of antihypertensive drugs, in 25,540 patients. Blood pressure was the main outcome measure in 28 of these trials (Figs. 1, 2; Table 1) [36–66], and morbidity or mortality in seven trials (Table 2) [67–88]. Our 2015 update included two new trials with blood pressure outcomes on nebivolol [46, 53], and eight new reports on morbidity and mortality outcomes (five reports with new subgroup analyses from the ALLHAT and LIFE, and AASK trials, and three new reports of the VALUE, INVEST, and ACCOMPLISH trials) [81–88]. Trials were clinically comparable in describing the results of randomized controlled interventions with antihypertensive drugs in African ethnicity patients with hypertension, but the age range, inclusion blood pressure, drugs and drug dose varied (Tables 1, 2). Since we retrieved only two new blood pressure trials considering monotherapy with nebivolol vs placebo, the results of the 2015 update are similar to the data reported previously, as depicted in Fig. 2a, b. As a post hoc outcome, nebivolol was analysed separately as well because of the presumed different mechanism of action [46, 53]. Nebivolol is thought to enhance nitric oxide generation [46, 53]. However, the pooled weighted mean difference in systolic (SBP) and diastolic pressure vs placebo of these two trials is respectively SBP −3.38 mmHg, 95 % CI [−8.38; 1.62]; I 2 33 %; and DBP −5.00 mmHg, 95 % CI [−7.41; −2.59] (I 2 = 0 %). With the addition of these relatively large trials to the pooled analysis (Fig. 2a) the size of the effect of beta-adrenergic blockers on systolic blood pressure was similar, but the confidence interval became narrower, and statistically significant from placebo [pooled estimate for systolic blood pressure without nebivolol −3.53 [−7.51; 0.45] (I 2 = 50 %) [17], and with nebivolol −3.73 [−6.80; −0.66] (I 2 = 44 %), Fig. 2a]. Fig. 1 Trial flow: patients of African ethnicity. Asterisk with results for African ethnicity patients in the Materson [47, 48], TAIM [57, 58], TOMHS [59, 60], SHEP ([68] and unpublished report), AASK [75, 76, 81] and ALLHAT [79, 80, 86, 88]; LIFE [73, 85, 87] studies contained in more than one report. Most excluded papers were not an RCT; and of the RCT’s retrieved, most were either not an RCT in hypertensives, or an RCT’s in other ethnic groups, an RCTs with combination therapy, drug vs drug trials, or in particular for morbidity and mortality trials, multiple overlapping reports concerning these trials Full size image Fig. 2 Effect of different antihypertensive drugs on blood pressure in patients of African ethnicity. a Systolic blood pressure. b Diastolic blood pressure. a, b Our previous review [17] was updated (November 2015). Except for two nebivolol studies [46, 53], no new trials with single drugs vs placebo and blood pressure outcomes were retrieved. Random, random-effects model. Results are reported as weighted mean differences in reduction of systolic and diastolic blood pressure (mmHg) from baseline to endpoint with the use of different antihypertensive drugs compared to placebo. Squares are weighted mean differences in reduction of SBP/DBP (mmHg). The size of the squares represents study weight, and horizontal lines represent 95 % CIs. Arrowheads depict data outside the scale. When a study provided only the placebo-drug difference, we entered a “nil” for placebo results. Results for Materson and colleagues’ study and Weir and colleagues’ study are weighted means of older and younger people and patients receiving a high and a low-salt diet, respectively. Black diamonds are pooled estimates. Results for calcium-channel blockers were not pooled because the size of the effect was heterogeneous. ABC Association of Black Cardiologists, TAIM Trial of Antihypertensive Interventions and Management, TOMHS Treatment of Mild Hypertension Study, TROPHY Treatment in Obese Patients with Hypertension [36–66] Full size image Table 1 Characteristics of studies in African ethnicity patients: blood pressure outcomes Full size table Table 2 Trials with morbidity and mortality outcomes in African ethnicity patients Full size table Achievement of target DBP differed by drug class, calcium-channel blockers 46 % (RR 3.39 [2.35; 4.90]; diuretics 31 % (RR 2.49 [1.68; 3.69]; beta-adrenergic blockers 24 % (RR 1.97 [1.43; 2.72]; centrally acting agents 23 % (RR 2.22 [1.35; 3.63]; angiotensin II receptor blockers 19 % (1.77 [1.41; 2.21]; alpha-blockers 13 % (RR 1.71 [1.02; 2.86]; and ACE inhibitors 10 % (RR 1.35 (0.81; 2.26); with a RR of >1.0 indicating a beneficial effect. Thus, the aggregated data show a greater effect of calcium blockers and diuretics, while beta-adrenergic blockers and ACE inhibitors are the least effective drugs to lower SBP and DBP, respectively. The cause of these differences in drug responses is largely unknown. Our findings are in accord with the suppressed activity of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system in hypertensive patients of African ethnicity, and the high activity of creatine kinase, promoting vasoconstriction and salt retention [8, 16]. As a consequence, patients of African ethnicity are significantly less sensitive to drugs that block the renin-angiotensin-system (angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors and angiotensin II receptor blockers) and beta-blockers [16]. Genetic and pharmacokinetic differences do not fully explain these differences [16], but altered cellular functions based on high creatine kinase activity and enhanced phosphoryl group buffer function have been implied in this group, leading to enhanced ATP-dependent responses including greater contractility, salt retention and therapy failure [16, 18], as well as lower NO bioavailability [8, 16]. We predefined subgroups based on gender and on geographical location. However, only 3 small trials out of 28 trials with blood pressure outcomes reported data for men and women (N = 146 patients), and this was not further analysed [40, 45, 66]. When we separately analysed US/Caribbean studies, calcium-channel blockers changed SBP by −11.89 mmHg (CI −14.12 to −9.67 mmHg) and beta-blockers led to a change of −4.83 mmHg (CI −7.91 to −1.75 mmHg); the size of the effect of alpha-blockers on DBP became heterogeneous. When we separately analysed data from African studies, however, only calcium-channel blockers remained more effective than placebo for all outcomes analysed. Diuretics did not significantly differ from placebo in achieving the DBP goal (relative risk 3.55 [CI 0.41–31.05]), and ACE inhibitors, beta-blockers, and alpha-blockers did not significantly differ from placebo in reduction of SBP and DBP. None of the African studies used a cutoff baseline DBP of less than 114 mmHg, compared with 7 of the 15 US and Caribbean studies (Table 1). Thus, we could not determine whether the response of African patients truly differed from that of US and Caribbean patients or was rather related to higher baseline blood pressure levels. We retrieved seven trials with morbidity and mortality outcomes (Table 2) [67–88]. Most included patients were older than 50 years with risk factors for cardiovascular disease, followed for 3–5 years, with cardiovascular events and mortality as main outcome measures. The Jadad scores ranged from 1 to 5 (Table 2). An average of three drugs was needed in an add-on strategy to reach blood pressure goals as defined in the trials. The majority of African descent participants (50–70 %) reached blood pressure control, but 95 % needed combination therapy. In line with the blood pressure lowering efficacy of monotherapy, more patients on calcium blocker-based treatment reached goal blood pressure, while there was a reduced blood pressure lowering response in treatments based on initial monotherapy with angiotensin II receptor blockers or ACE inhibitors [82, 83, 86]. There was no statistical difference between the different treatment arms in primary morbidity and mortality outcomes (Table 2). The main side effects of long-term therapy were newly developed diabetes (diuretics > calcium blockers > ACE inhibitors), and a significantly greater occurrence of cough and angioedema with ACE inhibitors, 72 per 10,000 (0.72 %), vs diuretics (0.04 %), and calcium blockers (0.06 %) for African ethnicity patients in ALLHAT [17, 86]. In the SHEP study, the overall effect of diuretics on the primary outcome stroke in African ethnicity patients was not significantly different from placebo. In subgroup analysis, stroke risk reduced in women of African ethnicity (relative risk 0.36 [CI 0.16; 0.83]) but not in men (relative risk 0.98 [CI 0.39; 2.44]) [69]. However, treatment did reduce cardiovascular events as a secondary outcome (hazard ratio for all cardiovascular events, 0.50 (CI 0.32; 0.78) (unpublished results, SHEP trial investigators). Furthermore, in the ACCOMPLISH trial, there was no significant difference in African ethnicity patients between the two treatment strategies in retarding the rate of progression of kidney disease, in contrast to patients of other ethnicities where amlodipine/benazepril-based therapy was more effective than hydrochlorothiazide/benazepril [84]. Although ACE inhibitor-based treatment yielded better clinical outcomes in kidney disease in the AASK trial [75], there was no difference in prevention of cardiovascular events by drug type [81], while the results of the ALLHAT trial indicates that cardiovascular morbidity outcomes were worse with treatments based on inhibitors of the renin angiotensin system [86]. The use of lisinopril initiated treatment vs chlorthalidone in patients of African ethnicity was associated with a relative greater risk of morbidity: combined CHD (1.15 [1.02; 1.30]), combined CVD (1.19 [1.09; 1.30]), stroke 1.40 [1.17; 1.68], angina 1.24 [1.07; 1.44]. Heart failure risk was lower with chlorthalidone [86]. No data were provided for lisinopril vs amlodipine. In line with these findings with ACE inhibitors, the LIFE study showed that losartan-initiated therapy was superior to atenolol-initiated therapy in reducing stroke risk in hypertensive patients of European descent. However, among patients of African descent, losartan-initiated treatment was associated with a nearly significant increase in stroke events compared with atenolol unadjusted hazard ratio, 1.99 [1.00; 3.98] [85], similar to the findings of the primary outcome, a composite outcome including stroke [17, 73]. In addition, the risk for sudden death was 97 % higher in patients of African descent in the LIFE trial, with, at this relatively small sample size (n = 533) a trend towards increased risk with losartan [87]. These data indicate that therapy initiated with blockers of the renin-angiotensin-system is associated with a greater cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in patients of African ethnicity. We defined subgroups based on gender and based on geographical location for morbidity and mortality outcomes. However, morbidity and mortality trials were conducted in the USA only or included only a very small number of non-USA patients (Table 2). The SHEP trial’s outcome for men and women is discussed above, with diuretics not significantly different from placebo in preventing stroke in African ethnicity men. In ALLHAT, men of African descent had the highest absolute stroke risk (mean 6 year rate/100 patients 7.73, 5.90, 5.81, and 5.90, in African ethnicity men, women, and white men, women respectively) and the highest stroke risk with lisinopril of all sex-ethnic groups (6 year rate/100 patients for lisinopril 9.41, 7.25, 5.32, and 5.59, respectively) [88]. Furthermore, pharmacogenetics outcomes differed by gender in the AASK trial, only women randomized to a usual blood pressure goal (mean arterial pressure 102–107 mmHg), and with an A allele at CYP3A4 A392G, were more likely to reach a target MAP of 107 mmHg [adjusted hazard ratio of AA/AG compared to GG 3.41 (95 % CI 1.20–9.64; P = 0.02)]. Among participants randomized to a lower MAP goal, men and women with the C allele at CYP3A4 T16090C were more likely to reach the target MAP of 107 mmHg [adjusted hazard ratio 2.04 (95 % CI 1.17–3.56; P = 0.01)]. In addition, the polymorphisms Arg65Leu, Ala142Val, and Ala486Val of the G protein-coupled receptor kinase gene, GRK4, were studied in the AASK Study. Only in men randomized to the usual blood pressure goal (mean arterial pressure 102–107 mmHg), the adjusted “hazard” ratio to reach the goal blood pressure with metoprolol was 1.54 (95 % CI 1.11–2.44; P < 0.01) with Ala142Val. There was no association between GRK4 polymorphisms and blood pressure response to metoprolol in women [16]. Compliance data by ethnicity were only available for the AASK study. Based on self-reported data and pill counts, 23 % of the patients had at least one noncompliant event, non-adherence events (%) per patient year respectively were 7.7, 6.6, and 7.1 for metoprolol, ramipril and amlodipine [74–76]. As approaches to the management of cardiovascular disease risk need to integrate assessment and treatment of several risk factors, we describe the outcome of the lipid lowering treatment arm of the ALLHAT trial (ALLHAT-LLT) [89]. Patients of African ethnicity have been underrepresented in prior trials addressing the effects of cholesterol lowering. Participants treated for hypertension in ALLHAT were eligible for inclusion in ALLHAT-LLT when fasting LDL-C levels were 120–189 mg/dL (3.1–4.9 mmol/L) or 100–129 mg/dL (2.6–3.3 mmol/L) respectively for those with and without known coronary heart disease. The primary outcome was all-cause mortality in patients randomized to pravastatin 20–40 mg vs usual care (respectively n = 1769 vs n = 1722 African ethnicity patients). Vigorous cholesterol lowering therapy was discouraged in the usual care group, therefore the majority of these patients did not receive lipid lowering drugs (90 % in the second year to 72 % in the sixth year of the trial). There was no difference in the primary outcome of all-cause mortality between pravastatin and usual care (RR for African ethnicity patients 1.01 [0.85–1.19]). In other outcomes, the relative risk for atherosclerotic coronary heart disease events with pravastatin was lower in patients of African descent than in other patients (RR 0.73 [0.58–0.92] vs 1.02 [0.81–1.28]; P = 0.03). However, there was a significantly greater stroke risk with pravastatin in patients of African descent (RR 1.12 vs 0.74 in other patients, confidence intervals not reported; P = 0.03). As a result, there was no significant effect of pravastatin treatment on combined cardiovascular disease outcomes in hypertensive patients of African ethnicity [89]. Patients of South Asian ethnicityWith electronic searches (November 2015) we retrieved 1578 papers. We additionally retrieved three trials with hand search, which were not eligible for inclusion. Sixteen randomized controlled trials were included, with blood pressure as the main outcome. Only one trial was placebo controlled, other trials assessed monotherapy with a drug from one drug class vs a drug from another class. We did not include trials that only compared drugs within one antihypertensive drug class. The 16 included trials (Fig. 3; Table 3) were 4 weeks to 9 months duration (median 8 weeks), containing original data of 6 classes of antihypertensive drugs in 1719 South Asian hypertensive patients without a history of, or current cardiovascular events (n = 37 diabetics) [55, 90–104]. Fig. 3 Trial flow: patients of South-Asian ethnicity. Asterisk indicate that we included randomized controlled trials (RCT’s) with single drug therapy vs placebo, or vs single drug from another antihypertensive drug class for blood pressure outcomes (at least 2 weeks duration); and with single drug-based or combination therapy for morbidity and mortality outcomes of at least 1 year duration, providing original quantitative data in hypertensive South-Asian adult men or non-pregnant women. Most excluded papers were not an RCT; and of the RCT’s retrieved, most were either not an RCT in hypertensives, or an RCT’s in other ethnic groups, an RCTs with combination therapy, a dose finding trial, trials comparing two drugs within one drug class, or trials of antihypertensive drugs vs non-drug therapy or phytotherapy (n = 1525) Full size image Table 3 Characteristics of Studies in South Asian ethnicity patients: blood pressure outcomes Full size table Blood pressure at inclusion was generally between 140 and 180 mmHg systolic, and 90 to 110 mmHg diastolic. Most trials were conducted in India. The methodological quality of the trials was less than in the African patients, with the Jadad scores between 1 and 4 (median 2). No trial had a Jadad score of 5, and only 2 were double blinded. Most trials reported side effects and drop outs, but intention-to-treat analysis was used in only one (Table 3). There were no significant differences between drug classes in blood pressure-lowering efficacy, as analysed per comparison presented in the trial data [35], (data not shown). Calculation of the blood pressure lowering effect per drug class was hampered by the limited data and heterogeneity that could not be well accounted for (partly due the small number of trials). However, South Asians ethnicity patients represent a population subgroup where the average effect is of clinical relevance. Therefore, we allowed for heterogeneity in an a posteriori analysis, and used the random effects model to calculate the inverse variance-weighted mean blood pressure lowering effect of the different drug classes (Table 4) [35]. Table 4 Systolic, diastolic, and target blood pressure by drug class in South Asian patients Full size table Other effects described included that lisinopril reduced micro-albuminuria (−33 vs −10 % in amlodipine) [95], while diuretics and beta-adrenergic blockers were reported to have the well-known metabolic side effects on lipid and glucose metabolism. Non-diuretic, non-beta-adrenergic blocking drugs had a better metabolic profile [97, 99, 101]. There were no separate data provided based on gender, and no trials with morbidity and mortality outcomes. DiscussionThe WHO Global Monitoring Framework has set a target of 25 % reduction in premature mortality from non-communicable diseases by 2025, including a 25 % reduction in the prevalence of hypertension [105]. Hypertension is the main cause of cardiovascular disease and death across populations worldwide [106], and if the targets are met, premature CVD deaths are projected to be reduced to 5.7 million as a result of a 26 % reduction for men and a 23 % reduction for women [107]. Globally, decreasing the prevalence of hypertension accounts for the largest risk reduction, followed by a reduction in tobacco smoking for men and obesity for women [107]. Since hypertension may differ in age of onset, severity, and response to treatment in different ethnic groups, the increasing ethnic diversity of the European population creates a need for adjusted guidelines to adequately reduce risk factor level in all ethnic groups. Antihypertensive drugs are the first cardiovascular therapy for which there was wide recognition of differences in clinical efficacy related to ethno-geographical ancestry [16]. Patients of African descent as a group respond better to calcium blockers and diuretics, while the response to β-adrenergic blockade and inhibition of the angiotensin converting enzyme is attenuated [16, 17]. Currently, self-identified ethno-geographic ancestry is the best available predictor of this differential blood pressure lowering response to antihypertensive drugs [16]. As in African patients, South Asians also develop hypertension at an earlier age, with more end organ damage, but there are no known differences in the blood pressure lowering response to antihypertensive drugs, and despite the greater mortality, to our knowledge there are no trials in South Asians with morbidity and mortality outcomes. The existing evidence provides ample evidence of higher risk of premature cardiovascular mortality in South Asian and African ancestry groups [3–22]. However, to better quantify this risk and develop more effective guidelines, we need to improve risk assessment, and use risk scores validated for ethnic minorities [108, 109]. To this end, we urgently need European morbidity and mortality outcome data for these ethnic groups, as these are likely to differ from the American and Canadian situation, where far higher treatment and control rates for hypertension are reached [18, 110]. Thus, the risk of premature mortality in South Asian and African ancestry groups in Europe is probably underestimated [5]. Although new approaches to estimate risk in these groups have been launched [108, 109], there is still a need for data to support these. Also, we need data on whether lower thresholds to start treatment and lower therapeutic goal blood pressures need to be applied [111]. The Systolic Blood Pressure Intervention (SPRINT) trial indicates a lower cardiovascular morbidity and mortality within 3 years with a systolic goal blood pressure <120 vs <140 mmHg. However, this difference does not reach statistical significance in the subgroup of African ethnicity patients, with a relatively small sample size and a substantially lower mean age (−5 years) in this subgroup [111]. The International Society for Hypertension in Blacks [112] advises the initiation of treatment in patients of African ethnicity from 135 systolic or 85 mmHg diastolic blood pressure, and similar approaches have been suggested in South Asians [113]. The strength of this work is that we systematically review the available evidence of antihypertensive drug treatment with monotherapy for uncomplicated hypertension, and combination therapy for morbidity and mortality outcomes in hypertensive patients of African and South Asian ethnicity. The aggregated evidence should facilitate guideline development to reduce premature adverse outcomes in these high-risk population subgroups, but many questions remain. We are not well informed regarding the socio-economic circumstances of trial participants, which may have affected treatment failure [18]. Also, the trials are conducted in the USA, Africa and India mainly, and data on European ethnic populations are scarce. In addition, trials rarely report outcomes for men and women separately. Finally, there are no available quantitative data on antihypertensive therapy to reduce morbidity and mortality in South Asians, and newer, non-drug techniques for blood pressure lowering in therapy-resistant hypertension such as renal denervation are of unknown efficacy in South Asians, while in African ethnicity patients there was no significant difference with a sham procedure [114]. However, since there are ample effective drugs available, reducing hypertension and risk of end organ damage in these ethnic groups may predominantly involve different health management strategies. Public health approaches have been suggested to combat hypertension in all ethnic groups, with better models of screening, delivery of care (nurse-based, door-step care), the use of a registry to treat and follow all hypertensives, and initial low dose combination therapy to increase compliance and blood pressure lowering efficacy, while reducing adverse effects [115, 116]. Hypertensive patients of African or South Asian descent should benefit from these more aggressive approaches. In summary, hypertension in persons of African or South Asian ethnicity occurs more frequently, and is associated with more therapy failure and more severe and earlier end organ damage. European guidelines for cardiovascular risk management should take this high risk into account. Persons of African or South Asian ethnicity need to be screened at a younger age, and treatment should potentially start at lower thresholds with early use of combination therapy and intensive treatment monitoring to reduce the high premature mortality.
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Corresponding authorCorrespondence to Lizzy M. Brewster. Ethics declarationsConflict of interestThe authors declare that they have no conflict of interest. Statement of human and animal rightsAll procedures performed in studies involving human participants were in accordance with the ethical standards of the institutional and/or national research committee and with the 1964 Helsinki declaration and its later amendments or comparable ethical standards. Informed consentInformed consent was not required for this retrospective study. Rights and permissionsOpen Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. Reprints and Permissions About this articleCite this articleBrewster, L.M., van Montfrans, G.A., Oehlers, G.P. et al. Systematic review: antihypertensive drug therapy in patients of African and South Asian ethnicity. Intern Emerg Med 11, 355–374 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11739-016-1422-x Download citation
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Do ACE inhibitors work in black patients?Data synthesis: Numerous monotherapy trials indicate that black patients may have a reduced blood pressure (BP) response with ACE inhibitors or ARBs compared with white patients. Conversely, additional studies propose that race may not be the primary predictor of BP response.
Why lisinopril is not good for African American?However, lisinopril was associated with an increased risk for heart failure (relative risk [RR] for African Americans=1.32; 95% CI, 1.11–1.58) and stroke (RR for African Americans=1.4; 95% CI, 1.17–1.68), and amlodipine was associated with a higher risk of heart failure (RR in African Americans=1.47; 95% CI, 1.24–1.74) ...
Why do calcium channel blockers work better for African Americans?Calcium channel blockers (CCBs) and diuretics do not inhibit the renin–angiotensin system, and this has therefore been one of the proposed explanations for observed findings that CCBs and diuretics are more effective than other therapies in black patients.
Do African Americans respond better to calcium channel blockers?Patients of African ancestry as a group respond better to calcium blockers and diuretics, while the response to β-adrenergic blockade and inhibition of the angiotensin converting enzyme is attenuated (Table 1) [3,5,7].
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