Global Burden of Hypertension and Systolic Blood Pressure of at Least 110 to 115 mm Hg, 1990-2015

Mohammad H. Forouzanfar(Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation), Patrick Liu(Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation), Gregory A. Roth(Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation), Marie Ng(Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation), Stan Biryukov(University of Washington), Laurie B. Marczak(Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation), Lily Alexander(University of Washington), Kara Estep(University of Washington), Kalkidan Hassen Abate(Jimma University), Tomi Akinyemiju(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Raghib Ali(University of Oxford), Nelson Alvis‐Guzmán(University of Cartagena), Peter Azzopardi(South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute), Amitava Banerjee(University College London), Till Bärnighausen(Harvard University), Arindam Basu(University of Canterbury), Tolesa Bekele(Madda Walabu University), Derrick Bennett(University of Oxford), Sibhatu Biadgilign, Ferrán Catalá-López(Ottawa Hospital Research Institute), Valery L. Feigin(Auckland University of Technology), João Carlos Fernandes(University of Coimbra), Florian Fischer(Bielefeld University), Alemseged Aregay Gebru(Mekelle University), Philimon Gona(University of Massachusetts Boston), Rajeev Gupta(Eternal Hospital), Graeme J. Hankey(Perron Institute for Neurological and Translational Science), Jost B. Jonas(Heidelberg University), Suzanne E. Judd(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Young‐Ho Khang(Seoul National University), Ardeshir Khosravi(Ministry of Health and Medical Education), Yun Jin Kim(Southern University College), Ruth W Kimokoti(Simmons University), Yoshihiro Kokubo(National Cerebral and Cardiovascular Center), Dhaval Kolte(Brown University), Alan D López(The University of Melbourne), Paulo A. Lotufo(Universidade de São Paulo), Reza Malekzadeh(Digestive Disease Research Institute), Yohannes Adama Melaku(The University of Adelaide), George A. Mensah(National Institutes of Health), Awoke Misganaw(University of Washington), Ali H. Mokdad(University of Washington), Andrew Moran(Columbia University), Haseeb Nawaz(Southern Illinois University School of Medicine), Bruce Neal(The George Institute for Global Health), Frida Ngalesoni(Ministry of Health and Social Welfare), Takayoshi Ohkubo(Teikyo University), Farshad Pourmalek(University of British Columbia), Anwar Rafay, Rajesh Kumar, David Rojas‐Rueda(Center for Research in Environmental Epidemiology), Uchechukwu K.A. Sampson(National Institutes of Health), Itamar S Santos(Universidade de São Paulo), Monika Sawhney(Marshall University), Aletta E. Schutte(North-West University), Sadaf G Sepanlou(Digestive Disease Research Institute), Girma Temam Shifa(Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples' Region), Ivy Shiue(Alzheimer Scotland), Bemnet Tedla(University of Gondar), Amanda G. Thrift(Monash Health), Marcello Tonelli(University of Calgary), Thomas Truelsen(University of Copenhagen), Nikolaos Tsilimparis(University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf), Kingsley Nnanna Ukwaja(Federal Teaching Hospital Abakaliki), Olalekan A. Uthman(University of Warwick), Tommi Vasankari(Urho Kaleva Kekkonen Institute), Narayanaswamy Venketasubramanian(Raffles Institution), Vasily Vlassov(National Research University Higher School of Economics), Theo Vos(University of Washington), Ronny Westerman(Federal Institute for Population Research), Lijing L. Yan(Duke Kunshan University), Yuichiro Yano(Northwestern University), Naohiro Yonemoto(National Center of Neurology and Psychiatry), Maysaa El Sayed Zaki(Mansoura University), Christopher J L Murray(Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation)
JAMA
January 10, 2017
Cited by 2,423Open Access
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Abstract

Importance: Elevated systolic blood (SBP) pressure is a leading global health risk. Quantifying the levels of SBP is important to guide prevention policies and interventions. Objective: To estimate the association between SBP of at least 110 to 115 mm Hg and SBP of 140 mm Hg or higher and the burden of different causes of death and disability by age and sex for 195 countries and territories, 1990-2015. Design: A comparative risk assessment of health loss related to SBP. Estimated distribution of SBP was based on 844 studies from 154 countries (published 1980-2015) of 8.69 million participants. Spatiotemporal Gaussian process regression was used to generate estimates of mean SBP and adjusted variance for each age, sex, country, and year. Diseases with sufficient evidence for a causal relationship with high SBP (eg, ischemic heart disease, ischemic stroke, and hemorrhagic stroke) were included in the primary analysis. Main Outcomes and Measures: Mean SBP level, cause-specific deaths, and health burden related to SBP (≥110-115 mm Hg and also ≥140 mm Hg) by age, sex, country, and year. Results: Between 1990-2015, the rate of SBP of at least 110 to 115 mm Hg increased from 73 119 (95% uncertainty interval [UI], 67 949-78 241) to 81 373 (95% UI, 76 814-85 770) per 100 000, and SBP of 140 mm Hg or higher increased from 17 307 (95% UI, 17 117-17 492) to 20 526 (95% UI, 20 283-20 746) per 100 000. The estimated annual death rate per 100 000 associated with SBP of at least 110 to 115 mm Hg increased from 135.6 (95% UI, 122.4-148.1) to 145.2 (95% UI 130.3-159.9) and the rate for SBP of 140 mm Hg or higher increased from 97.9 (95% UI, 87.5-108.1) to 106.3 (95% UI, 94.6-118.1). For loss of DALYs associated with systolic blood pressure of 140 mm Hg or higher, the loss increased from 95.9 million (95% uncertainty interval [UI], 87.0-104.9 million) to 143.0 million (95% UI, 130.2-157.0 million) [corrected], and for SBP of 140 mm Hg or higher, the loss increased from 5.2 million (95% UI, 4.6-5.7 million) to 7.8 million (95% UI, 7.0-8.7 million). The largest numbers of SBP-related deaths were caused by ischemic heart disease (4.9 million [95% UI, 4.0-5.7 million]; 54.5%), hemorrhagic stroke (2.0 million [95% UI, 1.6-2.3 million]; 58.3%), and ischemic stroke (1.5 million [95% UI, 1.2-1.8 million]; 50.0%). In 2015, China, India, Russia, Indonesia, and the United States accounted for more than half of the global DALYs related to SBP of at least 110 to 115 mm Hg. Conclusions and Relevance: In international surveys, although there is uncertainty in some estimates, the rate of elevated SBP (≥110-115 and ≥140 mm Hg) increased substantially between 1990 and 2015, and DALYs and deaths associated with elevated SBP also increased. Projections based on this sample suggest that in 2015, an estimated 3.5 billion adults had SBP of at least 110 to 115 mm Hg and 874 million adults had SBP of 140 mm Hg or higher.


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