The association of leptin and incident hypertension in the reasons for geographic and racial differences in stroke (REGARDS) cohort

IF 2.7 4区 医学 Q2 PERIPHERAL VASCULAR DISEASE Journal of Human Hypertension Pub Date : 2024-10-01 DOI:10.1038/s41371-024-00963-w
S. E. Sherman, E. Stoutenburg, D. L. Long, S. P. Juraschek, M. Cushman, V. J. Howard, R. P. Tracy, S. E. Judd, D. Kamin Mukaz, N. A. Zakai, T. B. Plante
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Abstract

Leptin is an adipokine associated with obesity and with hypertension in animal models. Whether leptin is associated with hypertension independent of obesity is unclear. Relative to White adults, Black adults have higher circulating leptin concentration. As such, leptin may mediate some of the excess burden of incident hypertension among Black adults. REGARDS enrolled 30,239 adults aged ≥45 years from 48 US states in 2003–07. Baseline leptin was measured in a sex- and race-stratified sample of 4400 participants. Modified Poisson regression estimated relative risk (RR) of incident hypertension (new ≥140/≥90 mmHg threshold or use of antihypertensives) per SD of log-transformed leptin, stratified by obesity (BMI of 30 kg/m2). Inverse odds ratio weighting estimated the % mediation by leptin of the excess hypertension RR among Black relative to White participants. Among the 1821 participants without prevalent hypertension, 35% developed incident hypertension. Obesity modified the relationship between leptin and incident hypertension (P-interaction 0.006) such that higher leptin was associated with greater hypertension risk in the crude model among those with BMI < 30 kg/m2, but not those with BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2. This was fully attenuated when adjusting for anthropometric measures. In the crude model, Black adults had a 52% greater risk of incident hypertension. Leptin did not significantly mediate this disparity. In this national U.S. sample, leptin was associated with incident hypertension among non-obese but not obese adults. Future investigations should focus on the effect of weight modification on incident hypertension among non-obese adults with elevated leptin.

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中风的地域和种族差异原因(REGARDS)队列中瘦素与高血压发病率的关系。
瘦素是一种与肥胖和动物模型中的高血压有关的脂肪因子。瘦素是否与肥胖无关而与高血压有关,目前尚不清楚。与白人成年人相比,黑人成年人的循环瘦素浓度较高。因此,瘦素可能在一定程度上介导了黑人高血压的发病。REGARDS于2003-2007年在美国48个州招募了30239名年龄≥45岁的成年人。对4400名参与者的性别和种族分层样本进行了瘦素基线测量。根据肥胖程度(体重指数为 30 kg/m2)分层,修正泊松回归估算了每 SD 对数转换瘦素发生高血压(新≥140/≥90 mmHg 临界值或使用降压药)的相对风险 (RR)。通过反比例加权法估算了瘦素对黑人相对于白人参与者高血压RR超常的调解率。在1821名未患高血压的参与者中,35%的人患上了高血压。肥胖改变了瘦素与高血压发病率之间的关系(P-交互作用为 0.006),因此在粗略模型中,体重指数为 2 的参与者中,瘦素越高,高血压风险越大,而体重指数≥ 30 kg/m2 的参与者中,瘦素越低,高血压风险越小。在对人体测量指标进行调整后,这种关联完全减弱。在粗略模型中,黑人成人罹患高血压的风险要高出52%。瘦素对这一差异没有明显的调节作用。在这一美国全国样本中,瘦素与非肥胖成年人的高血压发病率有关,但与肥胖成年人无关。未来的研究应重点关注体重调整对瘦素升高的非肥胖成人高血压发病率的影响。
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来源期刊
Journal of Human Hypertension
Journal of Human Hypertension 医学-外周血管病
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
3.70%
发文量
126
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Human Hypertension is published monthly and is of interest to health care professionals who deal with hypertension (specialists, internists, primary care physicians) and public health workers. We believe that our patients benefit from robust scientific data that are based on well conducted clinical trials. We also believe that basic sciences are the foundations on which we build our knowledge of clinical conditions and their management. Towards this end, although we are primarily a clinical based journal, we also welcome suitable basic sciences studies that promote our understanding of human hypertension. The journal aims to perform the dual role of increasing knowledge in the field of high blood pressure as well as improving the standard of care of patients. The editors will consider for publication all suitable papers dealing directly or indirectly with clinical aspects of hypertension, including but not limited to epidemiology, pathophysiology, therapeutics and basic sciences involving human subjects or tissues. We also consider papers from all specialties such as ophthalmology, cardiology, nephrology, obstetrics and stroke medicine that deal with the various aspects of hypertension and its complications.
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