| Literature DB >> 31986290 |
Liping Huang1, Maoyi Tian2, Jie Yu3, Qiang Li4, Yishu Liu2, Xuejun Yin4, Jason Hy Wu4, Matti Marklund5, Yangfeng Wu6, Nicole Li4, Paul Elliott7, Lijing L Yan8, Darwin R Labarthe9, Zhixin Hao10, Jingpu Shi11, Xiangxian Feng12, Jianxin Zhang13, Yuhong Zhang14, Ruijuan Zhang15, Bo Zhou11, Zhifang Li12, Jixin Sun13, Yi Zhao14, Yan Yu15, Bruce Neal16.
Abstract
The Salt Substitute and Stroke Study is an ongoing 5-year large-scale cluster randomized trial investigating the effects of potassium-enriched salt substitute compared to usual salt on the risk of stroke. The study involves 600 villages and 20,996 individuals in rural China. Intermediate risk markers were measured in a random subsample of villages every 12 months over 3 years to track progress against key assumptions underlying study design. Measures of 24-hour urinary sodium, 24-hour urinary potassium, blood pressure and participants' use of salt substitute were recorded, with differences between intervention and control groups estimated using generalized linear mixed models. The primary outcome of annual event rate in the two groups combined was determined by dividing confirmed fatal and non-fatal strokes by total follow-up time in the first 2 years. The mean differences (95% CI) were -0.32 g (-0.68 to 0.05) for 24-hour urinary sodium, +0.77 g (+0.60 to +0.93) for 24-hour urinary potassium, -2.65 mmHg (-4.32 to -0.97) for systolic blood pressure and +0.30 mmHg (-0.72 to +1.32) for diastolic blood pressure. Use of salt substitute was reported by 97.5% in the intervention group versus 4.2% in the control group (P<.0001). The overall estimated annual event rate for fatal and non-fatal stroke was 3.2%. The systolic blood pressure difference and the annual stroke rate were both in line with the statistical assumptions underlying study design. The trial should be well placed to address the primary hypothesis at completion of follow-up.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 31986290 DOI: 10.1016/j.ahj.2019.12.020
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am Heart J ISSN: 0002-8703 Impact factor: 4.749