African Ancestry vs. Creatine Kinase to Predict Hypertension Control: Time for a Change?

Author:

Brewster Lizzy M12ORCID,Van Valkengoed Irene3,van Montfrans Gert A4

Affiliation:

1. CK Foundation, Amsterdam, Netherlands

2. AIGHD, Amsterdam, Netherlands

3. Department of Public and Occupational Health, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands

4. Department of Internal Medicine, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract Background African ancestry patients are considered separately in hypertension guidelines because of more severe hypertension that is presumably harder to control. However, despite the perceived benefit in reducing health disparities, racial profiling in medicine is increasingly criticized for its potential of bias and stereotyping. Therefore, we studied whether creatine kinase (CK), an ATP-regenerating enzyme that enhances vascular contractility and sodium retention, could serve as a more proximate causal parameter of therapy failure than race/ancestry. Methods In a random multiethnic population sample, we compared the performance of African ancestry vs. resting plasma CK as predictors of treated uncontrolled hypertension. Difference in area under the receiver operating curve (AUC) was the primary outcome. Results We analyzed 1,405 persons of African, Asian, and European ancestry (40.2% men, mean age 45.5 years, SE 0.2). Hypertension prevalence was 39% in African vs. 29% in non-African ancestry participants vs. 41% and 27% by high and low CK tertiles. Control rates of treated patients were similar by ancestry (African ancestry patients 40%, non-African ancestry 41%; P = 0.84), but 27% vs. 53% in patients with high vs. low CK (22% vs. 67% in African and 32% vs. 52% in non-African participants). AUC was 0.51 [0.41–0.60] for African ancestry vs. 0.64 [0.55–0.73] for log CK (P = 0.02). Conclusions In contrast to African ancestry, CK might identify hypertensive patients at risk for therapy failure across different ancestry groups. Larger, prospective studies should establish whether resting plasma CK is clinically useful as an impartial method to help predict antihypertensive therapy failure.

Funder

Health Research and Development Council of the Netherlands

Dutch Heart Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Internal Medicine

Reference17 articles.

1. 2020 International Society of Hypertension Global Hypertension Practice Guidelines;Unger;Hypertension,2020

2. 2018 ESC/ESH Guidelines for the management of arterial hypertension;Williams;Eur Heart J,2018

3. 2017 ACC/AHA/AAPA/ABC/ACPM/AGS/APhA/ASH/ASPC/NMA/PCNA guideline for the prevention, detection, evaluation, and management of high blood pressure in adults: a report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Clinical Practice Guidelines;Whelton;Circulation,2018

4. The impact of ethnicity on response to antihypertensive therapy;Jamerson;Am J Med,1996

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