Park Ina U, Taylor Anne L
Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minn, USA.
Ann Fam Med. 2007 Sep-Oct;5(5):444-52. doi: 10.1370/afm.708.
We wanted to systematically review (1) the participation of racial and ethnic minorities in clinical trials of antihypertensive drug therapy and (2) racial differences in the efficacy of these therapies for the prevention of cardiovascular outcomes.
MEDLINE, EMBASE, LILACS, African Index Medicus, and the Cochrane Library were searched from their inception to December 2005 for randomized controlled trials testing the efficacy of antihypertensive drug therapy in preventing myocardial infarction, stroke, revascularization, or cardiovascular death. MEDLINE was also searched from 2005 through 2006. The 2 authors independently assessed studies for inclusion and quality.
Twenty-eight studies met inclusion criteria. Eight trials reported results by racial subgroup. Trials with black and Hispanic participants (ALLHAT, INVEST, VALUE) found similar primary outcomes, but ALLHAT found a greater magnitude of benefit for blacks on diuretic therapy compared with nonblacks. One trial (PROGRESS) compared Asians with non-Asians, reporting that angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (vs placebo) were equally effective for preventing stroke in both groups. In the LIFE trial, post hoc analyses showed different outcomes for blacks and nonblacks, raising questions about the usefulness of angiotensin-receptor blockers as first-line antihypertensive agents in blacks. In 3 studies conducted exclusively in Asians (JMIC-B, FEVER, NICS-EH), calcium channel blockers were effective in preventing cardiovascular outcomes. No trials described cardiovascular outcomes in Native Americans.
Five trials made interethnic group comparisons; 4 had similar primary outcomes for ethnic minorities and whites. Increased minority participation in future studies is needed to determine optimal prevention therapies, especially in outcome-driven trials comparing multidrug antihypertensive treatment regimens.
我们旨在系统回顾(1)种族和少数族裔在抗高血压药物治疗临床试验中的参与情况,以及(2)这些治疗在预防心血管结局方面疗效的种族差异。
检索MEDLINE、EMBASE、LILACS、非洲医学索引和考克兰图书馆,时间跨度从各数据库建库至2005年12月,以查找测试抗高血压药物治疗预防心肌梗死、中风、血管重建或心血管死亡疗效的随机对照试验。还检索了2005年至2006年的MEDLINE。两位作者独立评估研究是否纳入及质量。
28项研究符合纳入标准。8项试验按种族亚组报告了结果。有黑人及西班牙裔参与者的试验(抗高血压和降脂治疗预防心脏病发作试验、国际维拉帕米 SR/群多普利研究、缬沙坦抗高血压长期使用评价研究)发现主要结局相似,但抗高血压和降脂治疗预防心脏病发作试验发现黑人接受利尿剂治疗比非黑人受益更大。一项试验(培哚普利预防复发性中风研究)比较了亚洲人和非亚洲人,报告称血管紧张素转换酶抑制剂(与安慰剂相比)在两组预防中风方面同样有效。在氯沙坦干预降低高血压终点事件研究中,事后分析显示黑人和非黑人的结局不同,引发了关于血管紧张素受体阻滞剂作为黑人一线抗高血压药物有效性的质疑。在3项专门针对亚洲人开展的研究(日本多中心心血管病干预研究 - B、高血压疗效和安全性评价研究、新西兰华人高血压研究)中,钙通道阻滞剂在预防心血管结局方面有效。没有试验描述美洲原住民的心血管结局。
5项试验进行了种族间组比较;4项试验中少数族裔和白人的主要结局相似。未来研究需要增加少数族裔的参与,以确定最佳预防疗法,尤其是在比较多种抗高血压治疗方案的以结局为导向的试验中。