Frontiers in Public Health (Nov 2024)

Impact of intensive hypertension criteria on multimorbidity prevalence and patterns in a multi-ethnic Chinese population

  • Yezhou Liu,
  • Baibing Mi,
  • Leilei Pei,
  • Shaonong Dang,
  • Hong Yan,
  • Chao Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2024.1443104
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12

Abstract

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BackgroundThe impact of intensive hypertension criteria on multimorbidity prevalence and patterns remains understudied. We investigated the prevalence and patterns of multimorbidity using both the current (140/90 mmHg) and intensive (130/80 mmHg) hypertension criteria within a multi-ethnic Chinese population.MethodsData were obtained from the baseline survey of the Regional Ethnic Cohort Study in Northwest China, conducted from June 2018 to May 2019, which enrolled adults aged 35–74 years from five provinces. A total of 114,299 participants were included in this study. Multimorbidity was defined as the presence of at least two chronic diseases or conditions from a list of 26, ascertained through self-report and physical examination. Agglomerative hierarchical cluster analysis was employed to identify multimorbidity patterns. A hypertension-related multimorbidity pattern was identified and further analyzed. The prevalence of multimorbidity and hypertension-related pattern were analyzed in different subgroups, and subgroup cluster analyses were conducted stratified by sex, age, and ethnicity.ResultsApplying the intensive 130/80 mmHg hypertension criteria resulted in an increase in multimorbidity prevalence from 17.6% (20,128 participants) to 21.7% (24,805 participants) compared to the 140/90 mmHg criteria. Four distinct multimorbidity patterns were consistently identified: cardiometabolic, digestive-bone-kidney, respiratory, and mental-cancer. Hypertension consistently clustered within the cardiometabolic pattern alongside diabetes, acute myocardial infarction, angina, and stroke/TIA, with relatively stable proportions observed even under the 130/80 mmHg threshold.ConclusionThe revision of hypertension criteria significantly expands the population identified as having multimorbidity, without altering the identified multimorbidity patterns. Hypertension commonly co-occurs within the cardiometabolic cluster. These findings highlight the need for improved treatment and management strategies specifically targeting cardiometabolic multimorbidity.

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