Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (May 2024)

Social Determinants of Health and Incident Apparent Treatment‐Resistant Hypertension Among White and Black US Adults: The REGARDS Study

  • Oluwasegun P. Akinyelure,
  • Byron C. Jaeger,
  • Monika M. Safford,
  • Suzanne Oparil,
  • April P. Carson,
  • Andrew Sims,
  • Lonnie Hannon,
  • George Howard,
  • Paul Muntner,
  • Shakia T. Hardy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.123.031695
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10

Abstract

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Background We examined the association of multilevel social determinants of health with incident apparent treatment‐resistant hypertension (aTRH). Methods and Results We analyzed data from 2774 White and 2257 Black US adults from the REGARDS (Reasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke) study taking antihypertensive medication without aTRH at baseline to estimate the association of social determinants of health with incident aTRH. Selection of social determinants of health was guided by the Healthy People 2030 domains of education, economic stability, social context, neighborhood environment, and health care access. Blood pressure (BP) was measured during study visits, and antihypertensive medication classes were identified through a pill bottle review. Incident aTRH was defined as (1) systolic BP ≥140 mm Hg or diastolic BP ≥90 mm Hg, or systolic BP ≥130 mm Hg or diastolic BP ≥80 mm Hg for those with diabetes or chronic kidney disease while taking ≥3 classes of antihypertensive medication or (2) taking ≥4 classes of antihypertensive medication regardless of BP level, at the follow‐up visit. Over a median 9.5 years of follow‐up, 15.9% of White and 24.0% of Black adults developed aTRH. A percent of the excess aTRH risk among Black versus White adults was mediated by low education (14.2%), low income (16.0%), not seeing a friend or relative in the past month (8.1%), not having someone to care for them if ill or disabled (7.6%), lack of health insurance (10.6%), living in a disadvantaged neighborhood (18.0%), and living in states with poor public health infrastructure (6.0%). Conclusions Part of the association between race and incident aTRH risk was mediated by social determinants of health.

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