Duffy Sean, Villalobos Juan Aguirre, Chavez Alejandro, Tetreault Kaitlin, Dang Do, Chen Guanhua, Valley Taryn McGinn
Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison.
University of California, San Francisco School of Medicine.
Healthc Low Resour Settings. 2024 Oct 28;12(4). doi: 10.4081/hls.2024.12370. Epub 2024 Jul 31.
Hypertension is the leading preventable cause of death worldwide. Two-thirds of people with hypertension live in Low- and Middle-Income Countries (LMIC). However, epidemiological data necessary to address the growing burden of hypertension and other Non-Communicable Diseases (NCDs) in LMICs are severely lacking. Electronic Health Records (EHRs) are an emerging source of epidemiological data for LMICs, but have been underutilized for NCD monitoring. The objective of this study was to estimate the prevalence of hypertension in a rural Indigenous community in Guatemala using EHR data, describe hypertension risk factors and current treatment in this population, and demonstrate the feasibility of using EHR data for epidemiological surveillance of NCDs in LMIC. We conducted a cross-sectional analysis of 3646 adult clinic visits. We calculated hypertension prevalence using physician diagnosis, antihypertensive treatment, or Blood Pressure (BP) ≥140/90 mmHg. We noted antihypertensives prescribed and BP control (defined as BP<140/90 mmHg) for a total of 2496 unique patients (21% of whom were men). We constructed mixed-effects models to investigate the relationship between BP and hypertension risk factors. The estimated hypertension prevalence was 16.7%. Two-thirds of these patients had elevated BP, but were not diagnosed with or treated for hypertension. Most patients receiving treatment were prescribed monotherapy and only 31.0% of those with recognized hypertension had controlled BP. Male sex, older age, increasing weight, and history of hypertension were associated with increasing systolic BP, while history of hypertension, history of diabetes, and increasing weight were associated with increasing diastolic BP. Using EHR data, we estimated comparable hypertension prevalence and similar risk factor associations to prior studies conducted in Guatemala, which used traditional epidemiological methods. Hypertension was underrecognized and undertreated in our study population, and our study was more efficient than traditional methods and provided additional data on treatment and outcomes; insights gleaned from this analysis were essential in developing a sustainable intervention. Our experience demonstrates the feasibility and advantages of using EHR-derived data for NCD surveillance and program planning in LMICs.
高血压是全球主要的可预防死因。三分之二的高血压患者生活在低收入和中等收入国家(LMIC)。然而,严重缺乏应对LMIC中日益增长的高血压及其他非传染性疾病(NCD)负担所需的流行病学数据。电子健康记录(EHR)是LMIC流行病学数据的一个新兴来源,但在非传染性疾病监测方面未得到充分利用。本研究的目的是利用EHR数据估计危地马拉一个农村土著社区的高血压患病率,描述该人群的高血压风险因素和当前治疗情况,并证明使用EHR数据对LMIC中的非传染性疾病进行流行病学监测的可行性。我们对3646次成人门诊就诊进行了横断面分析。我们使用医生诊断、抗高血压治疗或血压(BP)≥140/90 mmHg来计算高血压患病率。我们记录了总共2496名独特患者(其中21%为男性)所开的抗高血压药物和血压控制情况(定义为血压<140/90 mmHg)。我们构建了混合效应模型来研究血压与高血压风险因素之间的关系。估计的高血压患病率为16.7%。这些患者中有三分之二血压升高,但未被诊断为高血压或接受治疗。大多数接受治疗的患者被开了单一疗法,只有31.0%已确诊高血压的患者血压得到控制。男性、年龄较大、体重增加和高血压病史与收缩压升高有关,而高血压病史、糖尿病病史和体重增加与舒张压升高有关。利用EHR数据,我们估计的高血压患病率与危地马拉此前使用传统流行病学方法进行的研究相当,且风险因素关联相似。在我们的研究人群中,高血压未得到充分认识和治疗,我们的研究比传统方法更有效,并提供了关于治疗和结果的额外数据;从该分析中获得的见解对于制定可持续干预措施至关重要。我们的经验证明了使用EHR衍生数据对LMIC中的非传染性疾病进行监测和项目规划的可行性和优势。