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Hispanic Women Benefit From High Blood Pressure
Medication Strategy
July 16, 2007
Hispanic women with hypertension and coronary
artery disease respond better to drug regimens aimed at
controlling high blood pressure than non-Hispanic white women,
University of Florida researchers report.
A UF study described in the current issue of the Journal of
Women's Health revealed that when treated with either of two
commonly prescribed medication strategies, Hispanic women
achieved greater blood pressure control and were half as likely
as
white women to suffer adverse outcomes such as heart attack,
stroke or death from any cause. The findings provide new data on
a population of ethnic women who have been all but absent from
such research.
"The study is unique in that we enrolled a substantial number of
women and a substantial number of Hispanic patients from a
variety of different Hispanic regions. As a result, we have data
that enabled us to really fully evaluate the treatment of
hypertension in this ethnically diverse group," said Rhonda
Cooper-DeHoff, Pharm.D, M.S., a research assistant professor of
medicine and associate director of the clinical research program
in cardiovascular medicine at UF's College of Medicine.
UF researchers studied 22,500 patients enrolled in the landmark
International Verapamil SR-Trandolapril study, known as INVEST,
and tracked a subgroup of 5,017 Hispanic and 4,710 non-Hispanic
white women who were randomly assigned to a drug strategy
containing either a sustained release form of the calcium
antagonist verapamil or the beta-blocker atenolol.
The INVEST study enrolled more Hispanic patients than any other
hypertension trial to date, Cooper-DeHoff said, and included
Hispanic participants from the mainland United States, Puerto
Rico, Cuba, Mexico, Canada, Guatemala, Panama and El Salvador.
After 24 months of follow-up, researchers found that both
treatment strategies worked -- and worked better in the Hispanic
women.
Blood pressure control, defined at less than 140/90 mmHg, was
achieved in 75 percent of Hispanic women and 68 percent of
non-Hispanic white women.
And despite having a higher prevalence of diabetes at baseline,
only 5.7 percent of Hispanic women suffered from adverse
cardiovascular outcomes, compared with 12.3 percent of
non-Hispanic white women.
Cooper-DeHoff attributed the low incidence of adverse outcomes
to the fact that Hispanic women enrolled in the study were
younger. If follow-up had continued over a longer period of
time, adverse outcomes in the Hispanic women may have increased,
she said.
However, these women remained at a lower risk for these outcomes
even after statisticians adjusted for age and other factors.
Still, she warned that problems associated with diabetes are
likely to show up in these patients down the road.
"Diabetes in and of itself imparts significant future adverse
cardiovascular outcomes," she said. "These women should be
well-monitored under the care of a physician so that they can
prevent future cardiovascular morbidity and mortality related to
hypertension and diabetes. Importantly, because the Hispanic
population is the fastest-growing ethnic minority in the United
States, Hispanics -- especially women -- should be included in
future cardiovascular research in order to further our
understanding of these high-risk diseases in Hispanic patients."
High blood pressure is becoming more prevalent in women across
all ethnic groups, Cooper-DeHoff said. And although it is
thought to actually be less common in Hispanic women, fewer
Hispanics have been included in hypertension studies.
"The INVEST findings are important because they demonstrate that
this treatment for Hispanic women really pays off," said Thomas
G. Pickering, M.D., D. Phil., director of the Center for
Behavioral Cardiovascular Health at Columbia University Medical
Center. "They've got something really interesting with this
study, and it wasn't something that could have been expected."
SOURCE : Article adapted by Medical News Today from original
press release
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